Post on 20-Mar-2018
Towards a Canada Post-Secondary Education Act?
By Sebastien Hug
Submitted to
Prof. Louis Simard
Prof. Nathalie Burlone
Prof. François Rocher
on 4 August 2011
University of Ottawa, School of Political Studies
Master of Arts in Public Administration
OTTAWA
© Sebastien Hug, Ottawa, Canada, 2011
ii
This thesis is dedicated
to my wife
Sulini
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TABLE OF CONTENT
List of tables and charts................................................................................................ v
Acronyms ……………………………………………………………………………. vi
Acknowledgements ………………………………………………………………... viii
Summary ……………………………………………………………………………. ix
INTRODUCTION: The Canadian exceptionalism……………………………… 1
LITERATURE REVIEW………………………………………………….............. 5
1. The knowledge-based economy and the state ……………………………. 5
1.1. Forces shaping higher education…………………………………………. 6
1.1.1. Knowledge-based economy and the knowledge society …………………..…… 6
1.1.2. Globalization ……………………………………………………………………..9
1.1.3. Neo-Liberalism …………………………………………………………………..11
1.2. University, society and the rise of the ‘evaluative state’……………........ 13
1.2.1. Societal expectations towards universities and scientific knowledge production.14
1.2.2. The rise of the evaluative state and the New Public Management instruments….17
1.2.3. A comparative perspective: Governing higher education in federalist systems… 19
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2. New university landscape, old federalist issues …………….………...….. 26
2.1. Recent developments and trends in Canadian post-secondary education 27
2.1.1. From an elite to an almost universal system ……………………………… 27
2.1.2. The blurring of the dual system……………………………………………. 29
2.1.3. From the Ivory Tower to the central pillar of the Innovation Nation …….. 31
2.1.4. Changing funding patterns and its effects ………………………………… 33
2.2. The role of the federal government in post-secondary education in the
context of Canadian federalism …………………………………………. 36
2.2.1. Shared responsibilities: power of the Constitution vs. power of money….. 37
2.2.2. From nation building to innovation nation: Justifying federal involvement
in the post-war era………………………………………………………….. 38
2.2.3. The „New Paradigm‟: Federal support for universities since 1997……….… 41
2.2.4. Looking forward: Policy ideas and proposals……………………………… 48
2.3. Summary and research question………………………………………… 53
THEORY AND METHODOLOGY
3. Higher education, public policy theories and the Advocacy
Coalition Framework……………………………………………………………… 56
3.1. Political and public policy sciences in higher education…………………... 56
3.2. The Advocacy Coalition Framework: A short overview…………………… 58
3.3. Applying the Advocacy Coalition Framework in higher education……….. 65
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4. Methodology………………………………………………………………………. 68
4.1. Data collection and analysis………………………………………………... 68
4.2. Limitations, clarification and ethics………………………………………… 72
ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION………………………………………………………… 74
5. Analysis………………………………………………………………….………… 74
5.1. Belief systems……………………………………………………………… 76
5.1.1. Deep Core beliefs: Equal opportunities vs. economic efficiency………….. 76
5.1.2. Policy Core beliefs…………………………………………………………. 79
5.1.3. Secondary beliefs…………………………………………………………... 90
5.1.4. Connecting the dots: An overview of the belief systems………………….. 94
5.2. Advocacy coalition coordination and interdependencies …………………. 100
5.3. Resources and strategies…………………………………………………… 103
6. Discussion…………………………………………………………………………. 106
6.1. Why is there no pan-Canadian post-secondary education strategy? ……... 106
6.2. Is policy change ahead? …………………………………………………... 111
6.3. Policy implications and research agenda: Towards an Innovation Platform.114
CONCLUDING REMARKS ……………………………………………………………. 118
BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………………………………………………………… 122
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LIST OF TABLES AND CHARTS
Table 1 : The Advocacy Coalition Framework – An overview
Table 2 : Coalition behaviour as the result of interdependency and belief congruence
(Fenger and Klok, 2001, p. 164)
Table 3 : The ACF in higher education research
Table 4 : Illustrative components of the belief systems (Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith,
1993)
Table 5 : Overview of advocacy coalitions
Table 6 : Overview of the advocacy coalitions‟ belief system
Chart 1 : Federal investments in university research
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ACRONYMS
ACF : Advocacy Coalition Framework
AUCC : Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada
CanFed : Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada
CASA : Canadian Alliance of Student Associations
CAUT : Canadian Association of University Teachers
CCL : Canadian Council on Learning
CIHR : Canadian Institutes of Health Research
CFI : Canada Foundation for Innovation
CFS : Canadian Federation of Students
CMEC : Council of Ministers of Education of Canada
CMSF : Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation
CoF : Council of the Federation
CRC : Canada Research Chairs program
CSHT : Canada Social and Health Transfer
CST : Canada Social Transfer
EE : Economic efficiency (Coalition)
EO : Equal opportunity (Coalition)
EU : European Union
GDP : Gross Domestic Product
HECQO : Higher Education Quality Council on Ontario
KIP : Knowledge Infrastructure Program
OECD : Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
MCEETYA : Ministerial Council on Education, Employment, Training and Youth Affairs
MPHEC : Maritime Provinces Higher Education Commission
NCE : Networks of Centres of Excellence
NDP : New Democratic Party
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NPM : New Public Management
NSERC : Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
PR : Provincial Responsibility (Coalition)
PSE : Post-secondary education
R&D : Research and Development
SSHRC : Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
SUFA : Social Union Framework Agreement
UBC : University of British Columbia
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This thesis marks the end of a nearly three year long academic journey at the University of
Ottawa, which has been incredibly enriching - intellectually as well as personally. This thesis
is not only the product of my scientific apprenticeship, but carries in it the relentless support
and love of numerous people, who accompanied me throughout this period.
First, I would like express my gratitude to Prof. Louis Simard, who guided me through the
scientific process of writing this thesis. He considerably shaped my critical thinking,
nourished my academic curiosity since my very first course at this university, and always
shown great interest and enthusiasm in my assignments. I would also like to say merci to Prof.
Nathalie Burlone for the excellently taught methodology classes, for accepting to be the co-
supervisor and giving me very pertinent advice on my thesis.
I‟m very grateful to my employer, the Embassy of Switzerland, and in particular former
Ambassador Werner Baumann, who was always very supportive of my studies. It is a great
privilege to have had a mentor like him in the first years of my professional career. Danke.
Since my first days in university, my parents, Hans and Liliane Hug, have lent me the
confidence and love to pursue my studies. The pride they never have hesitated to show, has
continuously given me the motivation to give my best. Danke.
Finally and foremost, I dedicate these pages to my wife Sulini. She has carried me through the
last three years with her unconditional love, support and endless patience. This journey, we
went together. No words can express how grateful and privileged I feel for this. Thank you.
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SUMMARY
The transition from an industrial to a global knowledge-based economy has put universities
in the spotlight of public policies as the new drivers of innovation and sustained economic
growth. Consequently, societal expectations towards the academic community have changed
and so has, under the influence of neo-liberal ideas, the public governance of higher
education. This is particularly true in federalist systems, such as Germany, Australia and the
European Union, where the roles of each government level in governing the higher education
sector had to be renegotiated and clarified. In Canada, however, despite repeated
recommendations by policymakers, scholars and international organisations, the respective
responsibilities have not yet been clarified and, to date, there are still no mechanisms to
coordinate the post-secondary education policies of the federal and provincial governments.
This paper inquires into the reasons for this exception. In the academic literature, this has
generally been explained in terms of Canada‘s uniqueness with respect to its federalist system
and the decentralized higher education sector. We attempt to go beyond this traditional
federalism, state-centered approach, which is predominant in the Canadian higher education
literature. Instead, based on interviews and official documents and inspired by the Advocacy
Coalition Framework (ACF), we shall be looking at the belief systems of the major actors in
the policy process and the degree of coordination among them. Our analysis comes to the
conclusion that, on the one hand, proponents of a pan-Canadian approach are divided over
their fundamental beliefs regarding the compatibility of inclusiveness and excellence. Some
argue that the federal government must legislate common standards to ensure equal
opportunities for all Canadians. Others propose a New Governance-inspired approach to
create a differentiated and competitive university sector that meets the demands of the global
knowledge-based economy more efficiently. On the other hand, even though the provinces
differ in their beliefs regarding the equal opportunity versus economic efficiency debate, they
share the same strong belief with respect to the role of the federal government. According to
this view, post-secondary education is exclusively a provincial responsibility and the role of
the federal government is solely to help them ‗fix the problems‘. Moreover, contrary to the
proponents of more intergovernmental collaboration, the provinces have successfully
strengthened the coordination among themselves to block further perceived federal intrusions
into provincial jurisdiction. We come to the conclusion that the absence of intergovernmental
mechanisms to govern post-secondary education is a consequence of the diverging belief
systems and the establishment of formal coordination structures among the provinces to block
– as they perceive - further federal intrusions. Also, there is less of a sense of urgency to act
compared to, say, health care. Finally, remembering the near-separation of Quebec in 1995,
there is very little appetite to reopen the constitutional debates. Therefore, based on our
analysis, we argue that contrary to suggestions by some higher education scholars, the
establishment of intergovernmental coordinating mechanisms appears unlikely in the near
future.
1
“We want to be the Smart and Caring Nation;
a society that innovates, embraces its talent
and uses the knowledge of each of its citizens
to improve the human condition for all.
…
Governor General David Johnston
Installation Speech, Parliament of Canada
1 October 2010
INTRODUCTION: The Canadian exceptionalism
“Describing Canadian higher education is almost as difficult a task as defining the nation
itself”, asserts Glen Jones (2007: p. 627), one of the most prominent scholars in Canadian
higher education research. He continues to explain that “the Canadian policy approach to
higher education has been – and continues to be – unique, reflecting many of the complex
social and economic factors that differentiate this country from its western, developed peers”.
Its origins are traced back to the colonial beginnings marked by French missionaries building
the first schools and, later, British royalists fleeing from the American Revolution, founding
the first higher education institutions in the 18th
and 19th
centuries. A crucial moment for the
further development of the Canadian higher education sector was the British North American
Act of 1867. At a time when the Canadian government‟s main task was to defend territorial
sovereignty and to promote economic development, education was not considered a national
priority. Alas, it was delegated to the provincial authorities, as it remains to this day. Thus, it
is commonly asserted that there is no such thing as a Canadian post-secondary education
2
system1 (CCL, 2007; Jones, 1997; Fisher et al, 2006; Shanahan and Jones, 2007; Tupper,
2009). Rather, Canada‟s post-secondary education sector is composed of thirteen different
systems. There is no federal ministry of education and no national university, which is unique
in the Western world. Canada‟s exceptionalism features another difference with advanced
higher education systems. Since the late 1980s, Western governments have initiated major
higher education reforms. The best known example, perhaps, is the Bologna reform in
Europe. In federalist systems, such as Australia or Germany, higher education reforms came
along with a re-negotiation of the respective roles of local and national governments in the
new governance structure. Again, Canada differs in two respects. First, Canadian federalism
has prevented such “sweeping reforms”, note Schuetze and Bruneau (2004). Second, Jones
(2007: p. 631) asserts: “The uniqueness of the Canadian constitutional approach to higher
education was (…) that the federal government has never been able to negotiate a clear, direct
role in this policy arena”. This is since World War II, when the Canadian government became
involved with universities more closely and, today, channels half of its entire Research and
Development (R&D) spending through them.2 That said, it is not because of a lack of
suggestions as to how the roles and responsibilities of the provincial and federal governments
could be clarified. In fact, some argue that there are indications that a national post-secondary
education strategy will be established in the near future (see Fisher et al., 2006). Yet,
proposals for a pan-Canadian or national approach have been made for decades, but they have
1 For the purpose of this paper, we will use the terms “higher education” and “post-secondary education”
interchangeably, while employing the latter mostly with respect to the Canadian context. Furthermore, although we understand that the notion of “post-secondary education” encompasses colleges and university-colleges (for a detailed typology see Statistics Canada, 2009), this research is concerned solely with the university sector. Finally, the terms “university“and “higher education institution” are treated as synonyms. Hence, when referring to post-secondary education institutions, sector or landscape, we include both aspects, teaching (education) and research, if not specified otherwise. 2 Canada, Government of, Industry Canada (2010), Science and Technology Data 2009,
http://www.science.gc.ca/937918F9-DFCD-42C4-992C-E4948CB883EF/2009-e.pdf (accessed on 29 June 2011).
3
never led to serious discussions and negotiations by the concerned governments and
stakeholders. Why?
This is - in one word - the question that we will address in this paper. The absence of
mechanisms or institutions to coordinate all level of governments, let alone all stakeholders,
in the field of post-secondary education has generally been explained ipso facto by the
exceptionalism of Canadian federalism. Although, without doubt, the particularities of the
Canadian federalist system and its history are the overriding issue, this research seeks to go
beyond this generic explanation. The underlying premise is that while the large political and
institutional environment sets the backdrop, a more in-depth analysis must also take into
account the involved individual actors, who interact within the parameters of these broader
socio-political and institutional structures. Moreover, their actions are guided not only by
interests, but depend on the way they perceive the policy issue and the policy environment.
Perceptions, in return, are based on our values and beliefs as to how the world works or
should work. Therefore, our analysis is inspired by the theoretical approach of the Advocacy
Coalition Framework (ACF). Developed by Paul Sabatier and Hank Jenkins-Smith, the ACF
understands policy stability as a function of stable advocacy coalitions composed by common
belief systems and a non-trivial degree of coordination within a specific policy subsystem.
With this theoretical lens, we shall inquire into the research question, that is, why, to date,
there is no pan-Canadian strategy or institution to coordinate the policies of the federal and
provincial governments in post-secondary education?
To respond to this question, we have structured this paper as follows: To begin with, the
literature review will in a first step take a broad look at the economic, social, political and
ideological forces that have had a significant impact on higher education policies in Western
4
countries, in particular with respect to the role of the state in this policy field. In the second
part of the literature review, we will narrow our focus on Canada and present more
specifically the recent developments and trends in this country‟s rapidly changing post-
secondary education landscape in the context of the relatively rigid federalist system. Of
particular interest will be the evolution of the federal government‟s role in the university
sector. Chapter three and four will explain the theoretical and methodological approach.
Based on interviews with representatives from associations, provincial departments,
universities and experts, as well as official policy documents and reports, the analysis in
chapter five will focus on the belief systems of the advocacy coalitions, the coordination
between them as well as their resources and strategies. The subsequent discussion (chapter 6)
will put the various pieces together and, in light of the ACF model, will, first, provide a
response to our research question and, second, discuss the current indicators for potential
major policy change in the near future. Third, we shall also look into the implications of our
research in terms of policy options and a future research agenda. Finally, the concluding
remarks will summarize the main findings and put it in the context of the current academic
literature on Canada‟s post-secondary education landscape by asking, whether our research
reinforces the image of the Canadian exceptionalism.
Unlike in natural sciences, the “why” question in social sciences leaves typically much space
for interpretation and assumption. Asking why a certain policy is not in place may in the
perspective of some people imply that there should be such a policy. It is clearly not the
premise of this research that there should be a Canadian strategy in post-secondary education,
or the contrary. Our goal is to foster a more in-depth understanding of the policy arena with
respect to the coordination of federal-and provincial policies towards universities. Our
5
findings will demonstrate that the transition to a global knowledge economy has divided
proponents of a pan-Canadian approach, while the provinces have successfully strengthened
the coordination among themselves. The status quo is furthermore enhanced by the absence of
complete data and a forum for dialogue among major stakeholders. Finally, our analysis of the
current indicators for potential major policy change do not support assertions by some
Canadian higher education scholars, that Canada is heading towards a national higher
education.
LITERATURE REVIEW
1. THE GLOBAL KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY AND THE STATE
Universities have never been completely isolated from the societal and economic context of
their times, despite being referred to as “Ivory Towers”. Their emergence in 19th
century was
closely related to the rising of the nation-state, as was their contribution to the development of
the welfare state in the 1960s (Kwiek, 2001). Hence, the state-university relationship has
always been an important one, indicative of broader societal values and beliefs pertaining to
the role of knowledge and education. An overview of the literature on Canadian higher
education points to three major forces that, more recently, have considerably re-shaped the
state-university connection, that is the mantra of the knowledge-based economy and
knowledge society (see, for example, Metcalfe, 2009; Skolnik, 2005, Wolfe, 2002, 1998),
globalization (Clark et al, 2010; Metcalfe, 2010; Skolnik, 2005; Schuetze and Braun, 2004),
and neo-liberalism (Fisher et al., 2006; Jones, 2007). This chapter will, first, describe these
meta-narratives that dominate the higher education discourse in Canada and elsewhere.
6
Second, we shall discuss how these forces have impacted the interaction and interdependence
between society, state and universities. In this respect, of particular interest for our research is
how other federalist states have altered their intergovernmental governance structure in higher
education to adapt to changing environment. Hence, the purpose of the following two sub-
chapters, 1.1 and 1.2, is to present the reader the main global developments that have driven
higher education policy makers in most Western countries, including Canada. As we shall see
in the analysis of chapter 5, these forces have contributed considerable to shape the belief
systems in Canada‟s university landscape.
1. 1. Forces shaping higher education
1.1.1. The „knowledge-based economy‟ and the „knowledge society‟: The emergence of two
conflicting discourses
The terms „knowledge-based economy‟ and „knowledge society‟ are widely used, but less
often explained (Beerkens, 2008). Both notions provide a „policy meta-narrative‟ (Ozaga,
2007) for politicians and policymakers to justify wide-reaching reforms. Building on the
endogenous growth theory3 and the human capital theory
4, the concept of knowledge-based
economy was adopted in the mid-1990s and subsequently fiercely promoted by the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. In its first main report on “The
3 The endogenous growth theory was developed by Paul Romer and the Chicaco School of Economics. In
classical economic theory, economic growth was explained solely in terms of labor and capital. In contrast, the
endogenous growth theory includes knowledge, more precisely science and technology, as a determinant for
economic growth. Whereas in the classical model economic growth was limited to the amount of labor and
capital available, the endogenous model predicts that sustained and unlimited economic expansion is possible
given that knowledge is abundant (see Peters, 2003; Romer, 1994). 4 Concepts such as National Systems of Innovation, Information Society and new Economy have previously been
used to describe basically the same thing, that is, knowledge and Information and Communication Technology
matters for economic growth and prosperity (Godin, 2009).
7
knowledge-based economy”, the OECD (1996) asserts in its introduction that “knowledge is
now recognized as the driver of productivity and economic growth, leading to a new focus on
the role of information, technology and learning in economic performance” (p.3). As such,
knowledge-based economies are defined as “economies which are directly based on the
production, distribution and use of knowledge and information” (p. 7). In its core, this
assertion was nothing new (Godin, 2009), but the concept of knowledge-based economy came
to be used as an umbrella term for policymakers to propose new economic and science
policies (Godin, 2009; Peters, 2001), in a world in which “knowledge and skills now stand
alone as the only source of comparative advantage” in the international marketplace (Thurow,
1996 In: Peters, 2001: p. 1).
The concept of „knowledge society‟ can be traced back to the writings of Peter Drucker
(1969), Robert Lane (1966) and Daniel Bell (1973). Accordingly, the increasing education
level of the people was going to result in the abolishment of class domination (Drucker,
1969), reduce ideology and make political decision-makers freer (Lane, 1966). Thus, the new
relation of science to technology is understood as a driver for social change (see Bell, 1973).
De Weert (1999) remarks with respect to Bell‟s conception of knowledge, it reflects optimism
that common sense or experience-based knowledge will eventually be replaced by scientific,
rational reasoning. As well, the writings by the visionary authors anticipate that the
knowledge society will empower the individual through education, by promoting social
mobility.
The current debate on the knowledge society refutes in several ways the optimism of the early
authors. The sociologist Nico Stehr asserts that the potential of academic knowledge to solve
societal problems in a rational and efficient way, thereby de-politicizing the policymaking
8
process, proved to be wrong. Science is seen no longer as a symbol for “secular progress and
civilizational advance” (2003: p. 647). Furthermore, some argue that more knowledge and
education does not necessarily result in a classless society (Brine 2006; Peters 2001).
Knowledge has become the central commodity defining social inclusion and exclusion,
societal status and material disadvantage. Thereby, education has moved to the center of
social policies. Traditional income transfer is incrementally being replaced by policies
focusing on education as a means to promote social equality (Banting, 2006). Therefore, to
ensure social cohesion in the knowledge society, better communication of knowledge to the
public (Ozga, 2007) and “the reinvention of education as a welfare right and the recognition
of knowledge rights as a basis for social inclusion and informed citizenship” (Peters, 2001)
are necessary.
In conclusion, the discourse on the knowledge-based economy has emerged from the simple
observation that knowledge matters for economic growth. Meanwhile, it has turned into a
rather fuzzy concept providing the political impetus for new economic policies that focus on
promoting research and development, in an attempt to defend a country‟s competitive
advantage in a global economy. In contrast, the notion of „knowledge society‟ was born in the
confidence that more knowledge will make society more equal. The current discourse
emphasizes the other side of the coin, that is, those who don‟t know, don‟t have and are at the
periphery of our society. What the discourses do have in common, is that they have been
framed, shaped and driven by two forces that have marked any policy debate since the 1990s:
globalization and neo-liberalism.
9
1.1.2. Globalization
Depending on whether one is a „sceptic‟ or a „globalist‟, the understanding of what
„globalization‟ means and entails, differs considerably (Beerkens, 2003; Held and McGrew,
2000). For our purposes, we refer to Held and McGrew‟s (2000: p. 4) definition as “the
expanding scale, growing magnitude, speeding up and deepening impact of interregional
flows of social interaction”, which “refers to a shift or transformation in the scale of human
social organization that links distant communities and expands the reach of power relations
across the world‟s major regions and continents”. Globalization as a determining force in
shaping contemporary higher education manifests itself in many various ways. Subsequently,
we describe three such manifestations, which have one underlying theme in common:
competition. Whether it is between individuals, institutions or countries, competition emerges
as a key driver in a global environment.
First, globalization expresses itself in a much higher mobility of students, researchers and
skilled labour. The international mobility of doctoral students provides for an indicator
illustrating mobility in the higher education and research sector. Between 1998 and 2006, the
share of international doctoral students has increased in almost all member states, most
notably in New Zealand, from 7.9% to 22.2%, and Canada, from 18.4% to 38.3% (OECD,
2009). According to Docquier and Marjouk (2004), the global brain drain resulting from
higher mobility has affected primarily developing countries, while, in the 1990s, brain drain
among developed countries has, in fact, decreased. In the meantime, the discourse has shifted
from “brain drain” to “brain circulation” or “brain train”, taking into account the fact that
many students and professors are not bound to a country and will go back to their home or a
third country (Wildavsky, 2010).
10
Second, on an institutional level, the international mobility of students, researchers and other
highly-skilled staff results in competition between universities seeking to attract the best
talents. This phenomenon is best reflected in the growing popularity of national and
international rankings of universities. These lists not only respond to a need for simplified,
transparent and comparable information for students, but also constitute an informal
performance indicator for governments and private funders (Michael, 2005). The best known
global rankings are the Academic Ranking of World Universities by the Shanghai Jiao Tong
University (in short: Shanghai Ranking), established in 2003, and the World University
Rankings by the Times Higher Education (THE), founded in 2004. Despite the continuing
controversies, Marinson and Van de Wende (2007) conclude that they cannot be ignored and
ought to be considered as a “potent device for framing higher education” (p. 326). This is
confirmed, for example, by a case study of four Canadian universities by Burnett and
Huisman (2010), illustrating the organizational, cultural and strategic impacts on the
university as an institution.
Third, the competition between institutions has further been enhanced by the worldwide
emergence of private providers of higher education. This may be regarded as a direct
consequence of the liberalization of services, spurred by the World Trade Organization and
the General Agreements on Trade in Services, GATS (Altbach and Knight, 2007; Morin,
2008). The rise of the free trade paradigm has contributed significantly to the
commodification of educational-services, putting in question the public nature of education.
Its ideological and theoretical origins are to be found in neo-liberalism.
11
1.1.3. Neo-liberalism
After World War II, economic and social policies in Western countries followed the view of
the British economist Maynard Keynes, who asserted that anti-cyclical government
intervention is necessary for an efficient and equitable economic system (Klees, 2008).
Starting in the early 1980s, Keynesian policies were abandoned because of rising inflation and
low economic growth, and substituted by so-called neo-liberal policies. Both being rooted in
classical economic liberalism, Keynesians and neo-liberalists share fundamental premises,
such as the view of individuals as economically self-interested subjects and of the market as
best way to allocate resources, a commitment to free trade and laissez-faire with regards to
market regulation (Olssen and Peters, 2005). A major point of dispute, though, is the role of
the state in the economy and in the society at large. The neo-liberals emphases the laissez-
faire approach and advocate for market-mechanisms as the overarching principle for
economic and social organization. The role of the state is to be reduced to supporting the
principle and the mechanism of the market. As Doherty (2006: p. 59) puts it, “the state under
new capitalism is engineered as regulator, decontaminator, caretaker, insurer, actuary, keeper
and curator of the market‟s infrastructure”. At the same time, Olssen and Peter (2005) argue
that neo-liberalism has surmounted the negative view of the state, implicit in the classical
liberalism writings, which fought against feudalism and the theoretically unlimited state
power of the royal families. Rather, “neo-liberalism has come to represent a positive
conception of the state‟s role in creating the appropriate market by providing the conditions,
laws and institutions necessary for its operation” (p. 315). Furthermore, according to the
authors, while classical liberalism sees the individuals as “having an autonomous human
nature”, that “can practice freedom”, the neoliberal state wants to model “enterprising and
12
competitive entrepreneurs” (p. 315). Hence, the policies‟ focus is no longer the citizenry as
whole, but the individual as a self-responsible economic actor (Slaughter and Rhoades, 2004).
In the field of education, neo-liberalism has shaken the very foundations upon which state
intervention was deemed legitimate to secure societal progress. From a traditionalist, neo-
classical perspective, education is considered intrinsically a public good (Marginson, 2007).
Education in itself is characterized as non-rivalrous (can be consumed by an unlimited
number of people) and non-excludable (its benefits cannot be solely limited to an individual
consumer). Furthermore, public goods typically have spill-over effect (or externalities). They
refer to the benefit of a good which cannot fully be internalized by the consumer. For
instance, literacy skills not only benefit the individual, but also the company whose billboard
the literate consumer is able to read. Because of these features, markets often don‟t produce
enough of these goods. Hence, traditionally it has been argued that the state must intervene to
„fill the gap‟ (Klees, 2008). This view has increasingly come under attack. Marginson (2007)
asserts that the conventional public/private perception in higher education has become
especially problematic in a globalized world. She points to the World Trade Organization
(WTO) as the principal global forum in higher education, which contributes to blurring the
public/private divide and perceives education as a freely tradable commodity. The General
Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), negotiated by the WTO member countries, is
focusing on the liberalization of educational services in four areas, that is: cross-border
supply (distance education), consumption abroad (international student mobility), commercial
presence (establishment of a campus abroad) and presence of natural persons (for instance, a
professor travelling abroad to provide a service) (Altbach and Knight, 2007; Verger, 2008).
13
The liberalization of educational services is further enhanced by bilateral free trade or
regional economic integration agreements (Morin, 2008). The liberalization does not affect all
countries to the same degree though. In fact, most countries have been reluctant to commit
themselves to liberalize educational services (Verger, 2008). Especially less-developed and
developing nations who deem that such an irreversible step would bear more risk than
advantages.
In sum, the changes to the higher education landscape incurred by the forces of the overriding
knowledge economy/society discourse, globalization and neo-liberalism have been
incremental. Universities and higher education systems have responded to them in various
ways. Although one may identify certain trends, there is no such thing as a standardized
university model or higher education system (Beerkens, 2008). Standardized policies
promoted by international organizations such as the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) are being locally reinvented and adapted to the traditions and
values inherent in each higher education system. Nonetheless, on the backdrop of those meta-
forces, a common element in most higher education reforms of the past two decades is the
redefinition of the role of the university in society and in relation to the state, which has
developed an elaborate set of policy instruments to steer higher education institutions.
1.2. University, society and the rise of the ‘evaluative state’
To describe the changing relationships between state, society and university, Guy Neave‟s
„evaluative state‟ provides for a pertinent guiding concept to showcase the historical origins
14
and the features of the state‟s changing role in higher education governance. The concept of
the evaluative state was first presented in Neave (1988), and subsequently discussed and
developed particularly by European scholars in the following two decades (Bleiklie, 1998;
Neave 1998; Dill, 2007; Jongbloed, 2007; Kehm, 2007). The rise of the evaluative state is
closely related to higher education‟s responsibility to society (Jongbloed, 2007) and to the
societal expectations pertaining to the role of the university in a specific socio-cultural setting.
Thus, we shall first discuss societies‟ expectations towards universities and academic
knowledge production, which differ depending on the socio-cultural context. The second
section will explain the rise of the evaluative state and its derivative, the New Public
Management. Finally, we are particularly interested in how this has affected
intergovernmental relations in federalist systems, where education is within the jurisdiction of
the member states.
1.2.1. Societal expectations towards universities and scientific knowledge production
Societal expectations towards universities are not the same everywhere. Depending on socio-
cultural values and traditions, people have diverging views on what role universities should
play. Bleiklie‟s (1998, 2005) „knowledge regimes‟ serve as a useful concept to establish a
basic taxonomy. Knowledge regimes are defined as a set of rules, cultural and social norms
which frame the context in which the role of knowledge in society is negotiated between
actors such as bureaucrats, politicians, students, professors, researchers, and business leaders.
Three ideal-type knowledge regimes can be identified, that is the idealist, functionalist and
rational knowledge regime. The latter refers to higher education systems in which public
15
authorities plan, direct and control research and higher education to maximize the benefits for
the society and the economy. Versions of this ideal-type regime may be found in South-East
Asian countries, such as South Korea and Taiwan, which have developed a state-centered
model of higher education governance (St. George, 2006). Yet, for our purposes, it is the
former two regimes that are of particular interest, as they are established in most Western
countries.
The idealist regime refers to a higher education governance model which seeks to uphold the
Humboldtian ideal according to which institutional autonomy must be guaranteed, and
teaching and research are closely linked. In this tradition, the state protects the university from
interference from outside, thereby allowing for the search for knowledge for its intrinsic
value. This regime is also referred to as the public-managerialist regime, characterized “by
university-state alliances, political-administrative and a semi-competitive logic based on
incentive policies, where part of the public support depends on teaching and/or researching”
(Bleiklie, 2005: p. 52). This ideal-type regime is mostly present in European countries, albeit
in different constellations.
In contrast, the functionalist regime, predominantly present in the US-higher education
system, features the university as an organization that reflects and responds to the specific
cultural needs of society. It shares common characteristics with the idealist regime, such as
linking teaching to research. But there is a tendency to search knowledge less for its own sake
than for utilitarian purposes. In the literature, this functionalist regime can also be linked to,
what Leslie and Slaugher (1997) call academic capitalism. The theory of academic capitalism
suggests that university autonomy, if it ever existed, becomes less possible in the context of a
knowledge-based, new economy. In the academic capitalism knowledge regime, knowledge is
16
to a large extent privatized. Eventually, privatization of knowledge also benefits the public, as
it spurs economic growth. Academia thus becomes a fully integrated part of a network of
knowledge circuits involving public, non-profit and private actors.
Akin to the private/public divide, which is not clear cut and rather manifests two poles of a
spectrum, both knowledge regimes “coexist, intersect, and overlap” (Slaughter and Rhoades,
2004) and must be seen as “different layers of expectations that gradually have been piled
upon one another” (Bleiklie, 1998: p. 310). Yet, in both regimes, universities have been facing
an incremental change in the way knowledge is produced, although the idealist regime has
been affected to a greater extent. The transformation in knowledge production can be referred
to as a change from mode 1 to mode 2 of knowledge production (Gibbons et al., 1994). Mode
1 describes the „traditional‟ way of producing knowledge, which is characterized by a
disciplinary approach, problems defined by academic and curiosity-driven interests,
hierarchical organizational structures and quality control solely based on peer-reviews. In
contrast, the mode 2 of knowledge production features a context marked by:
transdisciplinarity, problems defined according to their practicability and applicability,
organizational diversity with mainly horizontal structures, quality control that goes beyond
peer-review and includes a broader set of criteria (such as cost effectiveness) and, finally, a
stronger focus on social accountability.
The mode 1 / mode 2 model has also been the subject of some criticism. Hessels and Van
Lente‟s (2008) literature view point to some weaknesses, such as the high degree of
generalization and the lack of empirical evidence in particular with respect to the
transdisciplinarity and the modes of quality control. What has been less contested is the
dominating context of application and the stronger focus on social accountability. Thus, we
17
can summarize this consensus in Bleiklie‟s (2005) words, who describes the complex
transformation of knowledge production from a setting where “(…) science traditionally has
been regarded as an inner-directed, intellectually self-propelled enterprise that has „spoken‟ to
society” (p. 47) to a time where science “(…) finds itself integrated into society, embedded in
a context that increasingly „speaks back‟ to it” (p. 47). With changing expectations from
society and, thus, the taxpayer, comes a shift in the way the state regulates the higher
education sector, which has claimed institutional and academic autonomy to be the sine qua
non for any university.
1.2.2. The rise of the evaluative state and the New Public Management instruments
For Neave (1988), the higher education reforms in Europe in the 1980s depicted „the rise of
the evaluative state‟, which was the driving force for institutional and system development in
higher education at that time. In his view, evaluation as a policy instrument is not a novelty in
higher education. Previously, the state‟s higher education governance featured the usual
formal, administrative verification and occasional special commissions. The latter served to
provide in-depth reviews of the national higher education policy sometimes leading to major
reforms through new legislation which, nevertheless, respected academic and institutional
autonomy. The evaluative state emerged in the 1980s as a short-term solution to the financial
crisis in the context of neo-liberal ideas. However, it soon turned out to become a long-term,
strategic instrument for the state to „steer from a distance‟ through a wide array of monitoring
instruments. The evaluative state can also be closely linked to a larger public sector reform in
the 1980s best known as New Public Management (NPM). The NPM promotes a governance
structure that relies on quasi market-mechanisms and is based on the constant monitoring of
performance measures. The goal- and output oriented approach is based on the premise that
18
institutions are more likely to meet their targets if the allocation of resources is not pre-
determined, but depends on whether specific quantifiable goals have been reached. These
goals stress “efficiency, value for money and performance rather than democracy or
legitimacy”, state Ferlie et al. (2008: p. 335). In the higher education sector, the authors assert,
the NPM has been at least partially adopted in countries such as the UK, Germany or the
Netherlands. The following trends have been observed:
Market based reforms stimulating the competition for students and research
funding between higher education institutions
Introduction of higher student fees to empower students as consumers
Development of audit and checking systems for the measurement and monitoring
of performance in both research and teaching
Concentration of funds in the highest performing higher education institutions
Development of strong rectorats and non executive members drawn from business
NPM instruments attribute a new role to the state that diminishes its capacity for central
control in return for stronger strategic control (Crespo, 2001, Neave, 1998); or put differently,
instead of rowing, the state steers from a distance. As a consequence, independent quality
evaluation agencies are founded and legal frameworks rather than specific laws are enacted.
Closely linked to the NPM approach are the altering funding mechanisms, which shall ensure
that the strategic goals of the state correspond with those of the universities. Sörlin (2007)
illustrates that the trust-based funding regime, which pre-allocated block grants with few
strings attached, is being substituted by a performance-based funding system, which is more
project-based and requires comprehensive accountability schemes. Moreover, the
performance-based funding regime enhances the competition among researchers and
19
institutions, which results in the vertical differentiation of national systems causing frictions,
especially in countries with an egalitarian culture.
In conclusion, for over two decades, new ways of governing the higher education sector have
emerged in most industrialized countries. The degree to which the reforms brought about
change in the governance structure depended on the specific local context or the knowledge
regime. At times, the claimed changes were more rhetoric than substantial (Beerkens, 2008).
However, undoubtedly, societal expectations towards how the university functions and what
knowledge it produces have altered. Not surprisingly, many academics see this development
towards more exterior accountability and applied-research as an immediate threat to the very
foundations of the academic enterprise (see for example Altbach, 2001). Hence, in many
respects, the state-university relationship had to be, and still is, in the process of being
redefined and renegotiated. Taking these reflections about the effects of the global knowledge
economy and the neo-liberal public sector reforms on the university-state relationship a step
further, we may also ask how this has affected the reorganization of the state itself in
managing these changes in the higher education sector. Of particular interest for our research
topic are federalist states, where the responsibility for education resides with the local
governments.
1.2.3. A comparative perspective: Governing higher education in federalist systems
There is relatively little literature that compares federalist systems in the field of higher
education. Exceptions are Swenden (2001) and Brown et al. (1992). The comparative
perspective is limited insofar as each federalist system has its own features and historical
20
background. Yet, the following comparison with the EU, Germany and Australia5 will provide
us with an informative overview of how policymakers from different government levels have
clarified their respective roles in governing the higher education sector.
The European Higher Education Area (EHEA): A new mode of governance
In 1999, twenty-nine European ministers launched the so-called Bologna process that led in
2010 to the establishment of the European Higher Education Area (EHEA), which is based,
amongst others, on comparable degrees, a common three-tier degree structure and a regulated
qualification assurance system. Regardless of the controversial question of whether the
Bologna Process was as successful as it claims to be, it is “unanimously recognized as the
most powerful force for changing higher education public policy in Europe over the last 50
years” (Ravinet, 2008: p. 354). Twelve years after its launch, the Bologna Process engages 46
countries, including countries that are not members of the European Union, such as Russia
and Turkey. What are the policy instruments that explain this success and who are the actors
involved?
According to Ravinet (2008), a crucial element of the Bologna Process is its very light,
flexible and non-binding structure that is appealing to many countries. The continuity has
been ensured by the so-called Bologna Follow-Up Group (BFUG), which organizes biennial
summits of the Education ministers, and a small secretariat in the host country of the next
5 The decision to take the European Union, Germany and Australia as a basis of comparison is based on the following
reasons. Similar to Canada, the EU does not have a central Ministry for Higher Education. Germany is an interesting case
since the relationship between the two levels of government in higher education was, until recently, characterized by great
tensions. Finally, Australia‟s higher education culture aligns closest to the Canadian model, which, compared to Europe,
gives universities large autonomy.
21
meeting.6 The Bologna follow-up instruments refers to the concepts of „New Governance‟ and
the „Open Method of Coordination‟ (MOC), that are characterized by non-coercive processes
and collective deliberation (Bruno, Jacquot and Mandin, 2006). This policy approach is
translated into policy instruments such as the exchange of best practices, peer review and
benchmarking.
With regards to the involved actors, there is no European Higher Education Ministry and the
Bologna Process is not controlled by the EU. In fact, the European Commission (EC) was at
first deliberately excluded from the first ministerial meetings (Pongy, 2008; Croche, 2008).
Nonetheless, the EC exerts considerable influence on the process by shaping the discourse on
higher education policy (Keeling, 2006). It promoted concepts such as efficiency and
competition, and by presenting the Bologna reform as part of a broader economic agenda, that
is, the Lisbon Agenda, the Commission enhanced the perception of higher education as a
motor for innovation and economic development. Furthermore, the Bologna Process provided
non-governmental actors such as the European University Association (EUA) and the
European Student Union (ESU) with a platform and a visibility they did not previously
possess (Beerkens, 2008b).
As several authors point out, the Bologna process is a vehicle to advance the domestic
agendas of the European Education ministers (Kupfer, 2008; Ravinet, 2008; Schriewer, 2009).
Before 1999, many governments recognized the necessity to overhaul the higher education
system, but encountered strong political opposition despite major problems. For example,
France was struggling with underfinanced, overcrowded mass universities (Schriewer, 2009).
6 Note that during the Leuven/Louvain-la-Neuve in 2009, the responsible ministers decided that, for the future,
the country with the rotating EU presidency would also be co-chairing the process, together with a non-EU country. See http://www.ehea.info/article-details.aspx?ArticleId=8 (accessed 27 July 2011).
22
By pointing to the „inevitability‟ of the Bologna Process, governments could break interior
resistance against higher education reforms in their country and blame the intergovernmental
process if things went the wrong way. However, as the next chapter illustrates, the Bologna
reform also contributed to clarifying the competencies between the two levels of governments
in higher education policymaking.
Germany: From cooperative to competitive federalism
Up until 2006, German higher education policy was characterized by intergovernmental
cooperation and joint-decision making processes (Toens, 2009). Even though the Länder
(German provinces) had cultural autonomy which included administration, legislation, and
planning of higher education, the Bund (German federal government) had the competency to
legislate framework bills, which, for example, guaranteed accessibility by prohibiting tuition
fees. Furthermore, cooperative federalism established jointly financed planned programs in
key policy areas, such as higher education. Hence, the relationship between the Bund and the
Länder was marked by interdependency (Swenden, 2001). However, as a result of the rapidly
increasing demand for higher education in the beginning of the 1990s, which led to a highly
controversial debate along the provincial-federal divide about constitutional competencies in
higher education, the 1998 amendments to the Federal Framework Law for Higher Education
(Hochschulrahmengesetz) introduced policies to encourage more competition, differentiation
and deregulation (Hüfner, 2003). Nonetheless, as Toens (2009) demonstrates, it was the
interplay of the Bologna process and the overhaul of the German federal system that had the
biggest impact and changed the Länder-Bund relationship with regards to higher education
policy.
23
The soft governance policy instruments of the Bologna process presented a welcome
opportunity for the Bund to overcome the deadlocked joint-decision making processes and to
push the convergence of the Länders higher education legislations. The Bologna reform
occurred in parallel to the German federalism reform, where the struggle over competencies
in education was fierce. However, the Bologna reform eased the conflict insofar as the Bund
agreed to completely renounce the legislation of higher education policies if the Länder would
be committed to the Bologna reform. Thus, Bologna became a substitute for the Federal
Framework Law for Higher Education, which was abolished on 1 October 2008. On the same
token, the vagueness of the Bologna action lines provided the Länder with large freedoms in
implementing the Bologna policies, so that each Land (province) created its own version of
Bologna (Toens, 2009; Schriewer, 2009). Nonetheless, the Bund and the Länder continue to
collaborate through cooperation agreements such as the Higher Education Pact and the
Excellence Initiative. The latter, in particular, has received much attention. In 2005, both
levels of governments agreed to invest additional 2 billion Euros over five years, which were
channelled based on a competition to selected universities with the purpose to strengthen their
international visibility and competitiveness. The program has been renewed until 2017.7As we
see in the next chapter, this development in Germany contrasts with the reforms in Australia.
Australia
As in Canada and Germany, constitutional authority for higher education policy in Australia
resides with the member states. From the mid-1970s to 1987, Australia‟s higher education
sector was coordinated by an intermediary agency, the Commonwealth Tertiary Education
Commission (CTEC), which set up a framework for regular consultation and cooperation
7 See http://www.exzellenz-initiative.de/ (accessed on 3 August 2011).
24
including the states, the central government and the universities which have historically
benefited from great autonomy (Swenden, 2001; Gamage, 1993). However, under the Hawke-
Keating government (1990 – 1991), a fundamental shift with respect to intergovernmental
relations in higher education occurred. This shift must be seen in the context of the economic
crisis (Marshall, 1990), wider macro- and micro-economic reforms (Harman, 2005) as well as
the „new federalism‟ reform, which was to improve the cooperation and consultation between
both level of governments, thereby ensuring higher efficiency in the policy-making process
(Jones, 2008). With a „carrot and stick policy‟ (Gamage, 1993: p. 92), the institutions and, in
particular, the member states had to be convinced of the benefits of a more centralized
governance of education policy, which aimed to, among others, merge universities and
abolish the binary system8. As Harman (2005) concludes, Hawkes‟ objectives were largely
achieved. In terms of intergovernmental reforms, the Ministerial Council on Education,
Employment, Training and Youth Affairs (MCEETYA) was founded in 1993 bringing
together the responsible ministers from the national and the state governments at annual
meetings to facilitate the policy-making process within a commonly agreed framework.
However, this platform was also a means for the national government to impose its priorities.
In 1997, for example, the Conservative government of John Howard succeeded in convincing
the states to sign an agreement setting out national goals in higher education; a process
which became subsequently “an exercise in cooperation and compromise” (Jones, 2008).
Furthermore, in 2004, the national education minister once more pushed for greater national
consistency in higher education by making the Commonwealth funding conditional on a 10
point plan. Given the regional states‟ dependence on the funding, especially the smaller ones,
8 A binary post-secondary system consists of two types of institutions: the university which focuses on academic
teaching and research on the one hand, and post-secondary institutions with a vocational mission, such as
colleges on the other hand.
25
they agreed reluctantly. Moreover, the funding agreement for the period 2005 – 2008 was
controversial since the Commonwealth government made the funding dependable on the
state‟s commitment to gather data which was used for the establishment of national
performance measures. Prior to 2005, although the MCEETYA created a Performance
Measurement Taskforce a few years earlier, it was not properly implemented by the member
states, who then developed their own measurement system. Thus, the MCEETYA, from
which emerged the Ministerial Council for Tertiary Education and Employment in 2009 with
the same functions and objectives, allowed for the development of a national approach to
higher education. Albeit, one that reflects largely the national government‟s priorities. This
process of centralization was encountered with resistance and reluctance by the states, yet, as
Jones (2008: p. 170) concludes since membership remains voluntary, “members ostensibly
see advantages to a joint approach to shared problems”.
In summary, over the last two decades, the repositioning of higher education in federalist-
organized knowledge societies has impacted and redefined the relationship between different
levels of government. Whereas in Germany the Länder strengthened their position vis-à-vis
the Bund, in Australia the central government had early on imposed itself on the states. In
contrast, the Bologna process was established by European education ministers, at first, to
bypass the Commission of the European Union. Guided by a new mode of governance, the
Bologna reform sought to provide an impetus for national higher education systems in order
to be better prepared for the 21st century. Hence, in all three countries, political elites proved
the willingness to address the issue of clarifying their respective roles in higher education by
reforming and innovating the intergovernmental cooperation or division of tasks. As we shall
see in the following chapter, the same can not be said of Canada.
26
2. NEW CANADIAN UNIVERSITY LANDSCAPE, OLD FEDERALIST ISSUES
The literature on post-secondary education in Canada accounts for a noteworthy specificity.
Over a decade ago, Skolnik (1997) asserted that as a consequence of the decentralized system,
literature with a truly national perspective is hard to find. This explains why most of the
literature on Canadian higher education is organized either by jurisdictions or themes. Skolnik
(1997) points also to a few exceptions, one of them being David Cameron‟s More than an
academic question. Published in 1991, it provides, perhaps, the most thorough account of the
development of post-secondary education in the context of Canadian federalism. Cameron‟s
later works9 illustrate in several respects that many of the intergovernmental issues that have
arisen since the 1960s and 1970s have remained the same and, in fact, have been exacerbated
since the mid-1990s, especially under the Liberal governments. Another exception is the
current research conducted by the Canadian Council on Learning (CCL), whose yearly reports
aim at providing a national picture on the Canadian education sector.
Hence, Canadian federalism and post-secondary education are closely connected. In some
ways, post-secondary education has been the battlefield for many intergovernmental fights
over the last half century. This same battlefield, however, has undergone major changes in
light of the above discussed developments. Thus, in light of the above, this chapter will, first,
illustrate the recent developments and trends in Canadian post-secondary education.
Subsequently, in the second part, we shall narrow our focus on the role of the federal
government in the context of Canadian federalism and the changing university landscape.
9 See Cameron and Simeon (2002), and Cameron (2005).
27
2.1. Recent developments and trends in Canadian post-secondary education
2.1.1 From an elite to an almost universal-system
―The dominant story in Ontario higher education over the past half-century, as in many other
jurisdictions, has been the transition from an elite system to a mass system and then from a
mass system to a near-universal system”, writes Clark et al. (2009)10
. Between 1955 and
1971, the universities faced a growth in the enrolment more than fourfold as a result of the
baby boom. After the rather slow growth rates of the 1990s, the growth picked up again in the
beginning of the new millennium, with an increase of over a third since 2000 (see AUCC,
2008a). This growth is due, again, to the baby boomer generation, whose children have begun
to enrol in post-secondary education institutions. Hence, demographics have been a major
driving force in the expansion of the post-secondary education system, which, to date, is
facing the challenge of absorbing this demand. More recently, the long-held view that Canada
is a worldwide leader in terms of participation rates (Jones, 1997) has been questioned
because of the increased awareness of the difficulty to compare different higher education
systems (AUCC, 2008a). Nevertheless, policymakers in Canada and many other OECD
countries continue to seek higher participation rates. The rationale is that not only is higher
education seen as a key pillar of the knowledge economy, but also as an important factor
promoting active citizenship and creating a more inclusive society (Corak et al., 2005). It is
with this backdrop that accessibility is understood in Canada as an economic as well as social
right. The rise in tuition fees in the late 1990s and early 2000s has caused concerns that
people from poorer family background could not afford to attend university. Earlier literature
10
This statement is based on the definition of a higher education mass system having surpassed a participation rate of 15%,
while in an universal system the threshold is at 50%.
28
on this topic is „mixed‟ (Christofides et al., 2009) and „contradictory‟ (Mueller, 2008), as
some studies found a negative correlation between participation rates, and some did not.
Recent research seems to add to the growing evidence that the rise in tuition fees has had little
effect on an individual‟s decision as to whether to attend university or not (Christofides et al.,
2009; Finnie and Usher, 2008; Corak et al., 2005). Based on new data of the Youth in
Transition Survey, Finnie et Usher (2008) summarize the findings of several studies that point
to the conclusion that rather than the actual price of higher education, it is cultural and
environmental factors, such as parental education, high school grades, test scores and
schooling aspirations, as well as parental income that are the key determinants. Thus, as the
authors notice, despite efforts to off-set tuition costs through various means such as
scholarships, inequalities have remained the same, which, according to some experts, suggests
that the government programs have helped subsidize middle- and upper-income instead of the
low-income students. Therefore, there is growing consensus that policies should focus more
on „soft barriers‟ in order to minimize these inequities. That said, as policymakers must
continue to accommodate the growing demand for post-secondary education, they face the
challenge of increasing the capacity of the higher education system. As the next chapter
illustrates, a consequence of quest for more capacity is the trend towards a more differentiated
and diverse post-secondary education system.
2.2.1. The blurring of the dual system
The international trend towards greater diversity of higher education institutions has been
observed at latest since Lynn Meek‟s comparative research The Mocker and Mocked (see, in
particular, Goedegebuure et al., 1996). This development was spurred by the introduction of
29
quasi-market mechanisms which sought to shape the higher education sector so it could
absorb the higher demand for tertiary education. In countries such as Australia and the U.S.,
the traditional binary system of higher education was practically abolished by the mid-1990s.
Canada, however, was pictured once again as an exception, since its binary system remained
largely intact. As well, it featured a relatively homogenous university sector, in contrast to its
diversified non-degree sector, which includes community colleges and trade schools. Today,
however, the clear distinction between the traditional university with a comprehensive
undergraduate and graduate education, combining research and teaching, and the technical or
community college, which offers certificates or diplomas and is solely devoted to teaching,
has become increasingly blurred. This rings equally true in Canada (Baker and Miosi, 2010;
Marshall, 2008; Shanahan and Jones, 2007). For example, some provincial governments have
allowed several non-degree granting colleges to offer specific degree programs. Three
colleges received university status. Four provinces changed legislation permitting private, for-
profit universities. Next to demographics, there are several other forces explaining the growth
of alternatives to universities (Marshall, 2008): professional associations increasingly require
an undergraduate degree for licensing; despite increased capacities, universities remain elitist
and artificially limit access; and, finally, with the stronger emphasis on research, universities
– especially larger ones - tend to neglect the teaching mission. Although the growth in new
degrees has responded to the demand of policymakers and consumers for more post-
secondary education alternatives, it has also raised concerns. One of the major concerns is
quality assurance (Baker and Miosi, 2010). In Canada, the quality assurance of degree
programs in publicly funded universities rests with the institutions themselves. Although the
Council of Ministers of Education Canada (CMEC) has issued guidelines for the provincial
30
governments with respect to standards and quality assurance, there is no national quality
assurance agency or system. By default, the Association of Universities and Colleges (AUCC)
has assumed the role of an accrediting agency by requiring the universities that desire
membership meet a set of criteria. As for private institutions, a third-party quality assessment
is necessary to be granted permission to offer credentials. Another consequence of the greater
diversity of higher education institutions is the growing confusion among students and parents
about the value of the degree (Baker, 2010; CCL, 2010; Marshall, 2008). While traditionally
Canadian universities considered each other as equals in terms of quality, the recognition of
undergraduate degrees, particularly from non-university institutions, has become more
difficult. Thus, the Canadian Council on Learning concludes: ”Canadian degrees are no
longer consistently recognized” (CCL, 2010: p. 27). Finally, the blurring of the boundaries
between different categories of higher education institutions has resulted in questioning the
Humboldtian university model, which is based on a strong connection between the research
and teaching mission. The so-called Teaching&Research-Nexus has become increasingly a
subject of debate and research, fuelled by the important investments of the federal
government in university research since 1997 (Halliwell, 2008). Programs such as the Canada
Research Chairs, “are seen by some as unduly privileging research over teaching” (Halliwell,
2008: p. 12). The design of federal initiatives, such as the Canada Foundation for Innovation,
has further privileged larger research universities over smaller universities. The side-effect
was a stronger stratification among Canadian universities resulting in some policymakers
suggesting the official designation of institutions solely dedicated to undergraduate teaching,
and others to graduate teaching and research. Those calling for better system-design and
greater differentiation argue that only a comprehensive vision can respond best to the
31
achievements of societal goals and enhance competitiveness, accountability and sustainability
(Clark et al., 2010). Lastly, the demand for a more efficiently governed post-secondary
education system must be understood in the context of the shifting perception of the
university as a central pillar of national and regional economic development.
2.2.2. From the Ivory Tower to a central pillar of the Innovation Nation
The percentage of the R&D performed in Canadian universities is among the highest
worldwide, indicating the central role higher education institutions play in the national
innovation system (STIC, 2009). It is, however, rather „by default‟ that Canadian universities
have “largely come to be seen by policy-makers as a surrogate for innovation” (Dufour, 2010:
p.61). Whereas in most OECD-countries the private sector is the driving force behind R&D
investments, Canadian business performance has been historically very weak. A report by the
Council for Canadian Academies (2009) points to two characteristics of Canada‟s economy
which provide an explanation for the lack of focus on innovation in Canadian business
strategies. First, the strong resource sector has put Canadian businesses in an up-stream
position in the American value chain, meaning that they have primarily focused on providing
the raw commodities instead of developing innovative products. Second, the relatively small
and geographically fragmented market features fewer competitors and thus less pressure for
Canadian businesses to differentiate themselves by innovating.
Since the first explicit and comprehensive Science and Technology strategy in 1987,
universities have played a central role in the federal government‟s policies to stimulate
economic development through innovation (Godin et al., 2002; Godin and Gingras, 2000). To
„pull academics out of their Ivory Towers‘ and to integrate them into the national system of
32
innovation, the federal government launched in 1989 one of its most successful S&T policy
instruments: the Networks of Centres of Excellence (NCE) program. The idea behind the
NCE was that instead of investing into „bricks and mortar‟ to support science, the federal
government would create virtual networks among university laboratories to create synergies
through collaboration (Atkinson-Grosjean, 2002). More importantly, the networks were
required to include industry partners and conduct research with a potential for
commercialization. The ultimate goal of the NCE, however, went beyond creating industry-
university partnerships, as Atkinson-Grosjean (2002: p. 81) asserts: “The ideological goals of
the NCE program have never been hidden. A stated purpose is „to change the research culture
itself‟. Inevitably, the transformation of the Ivory Tower into a key pillar of the national
innovation system has met the resistance from academics. Holdsworth (2002), for example,
deplores the tension between politics and science, built up by the federal Science and
Technology (S&T) strategies, which devaluate the notion of critical inquiry and the pursuit of
truth. More recently, the discourse of the national innovation system has shifted to fostering
regional and local clusters of innovation, thereby creating a rational for provincial support of
university research (Cameron, 1997; Wolfe, 1998, 2002). Wolfe (2010) asserts that “the
contribution of universities to local cluster development should not be viewed simply as a
source of scientific ideas for generating new technology to transfer to private firms”. Rather,
they also “play a more fundamental role as providers and attractors of talent to the local and
regional economy and as a source of civic leadership for the local community” (p. 273). Yet,
in spite of their central role as national and local innovation engines, public core funding for
universities have been soaring.
33
2.2.3. Changing funding patterns for universities
“Few countries have experienced such a large shift in their basic financing arrangements of
post-secondary education over so short a period of time”, state Finnie and Usher (2008: p
159), by which they refer to the level of public funding, the shift in the funding pattern as well
as the change of public funding mechanisms. Comparing the funding levels per student
between Canada and the United States, the AUCC (2008a) notes that while in the early 1980s
Canadian universities had $2,000 more funding per student than their U.S. counterparts, the
funding gap has inversely increased to $8,000 per student to the detriment of Canadian
students11
. Whereas funding per student in the United States has grown over the last thirty
years, funding per student in Canada has dropped from $25,000 in 1980 to just less than
$21,000 in 200612
, notwithstanding recent increases of government funding. Between 1997
and 2002, total expenditures for Canadian universities have actually doubled. The lower per-
capita funding reflects thus the consequence of the rapid enrolment growth and the
inflationary pressure (AUCC, 2008; Snowdon, 2005; Clark et al., 2010). As well, there has
been a shift in the financing pattern towards a relative decline of the share of public funding
and a considerably higher income from private sources (Metcalfe, 2010; Statistics Canada,
2003). Between the late 1980s and the beginning of the new century, private revenues of
Canadian universities have risen by 167%. The biggest share was accounted for by a dramatic
increase of tuition fees in the mid-1990s, following the tuition fee deregulation (Fisher et al.,
2006). In recent years, the trend towards student fees covering a greater proportion of
university‟s operating budget has been moderate (Statistics Canada, 2007). Nevertheless, by
11
These monetary figures are in constant 2006-07 Canadian Dollars. 12
According to the statistics provided on the website of the AUCC, these figures have remained the same in 2008/09. See http://www.aucc.ca/policy/quick-facts_e.html (accessed on February 4th, 2011).
34
the end of the 1990s, students paid more than double than in the beginning of the decade. The
same decade also saw rising revenues from other private sources, such as investment
revenues, donations and contracts. For example, between 1991 and 1996, the income from
patents and royalties grew fourfold, albeit starting from a very modest level. This increase in
private revenues has resulted in a relative reduction of the public share in the financing of the
university operating budget, from 84% in 1978 to 58% in 2008 (CAUT, 2010)13
. However,
the apparent decrease of public support for the universities‟ operational budget does not
signify the retreat of the state from higher education financing, but rather a shift in funding
mechanisms (Metcalfe, 2010). Although most provincial funding systems still rely on how
many students the university has enrolled (see Clark et al., 2010), the trends goes towards
performance-based funding (Schuetze and Bruneau, 2004). Moreover, as we shall see in
greater detail in the following chapter, the federal government has channelled its money away
from supporting universities‟ operational budget in favour of students, through scholarships
and grants, and researchers by increasing support for direct research costs through the three
research granting councils, or the creation of new organizations such as the Canada
Foundation for Innovation (CFI) or the Canada Research Chair (CRC) program. Not
surprisingly, this important development in funding mechanisms has had major effects on the
academic enterprise. For example, as a consequence of the heightened research activity in
universities due to greater federal funding, indirect costs have increased (Cameron 2004;
Tupper, 2009; Snowdon, 2005). Indirect costs include, for example, heating and
administrative costs incurred through new research projects, and are covered by the
universities‟ operating budget. Consequently, operating budgets, which had already been
13
There are considerable differences among the provinces, though. For example, the share of public funding in Nova Scotia is 45.9%, while in Newfoundland and Québec, it amounts to 72.2% and 70.1% respectively.
35
soaring from lower public funding, have further been strained.14
Another concern pertains to
matching funding schemes introduced in federal initiatives such as the Canada Foundation for
Innovation (CFI) (Cameron, 2004; Lopreite and Murphy, 2009). Universities in smaller
provinces or rural areas are somewhat disadvantaged since they have more difficulties in
matching the federal funding. Unlike larger provinces, such as Ontario, where the government
matches CFI funds automatically, smaller provinces sometimes do not have the fiscal capacity
to provide such considerable funds. Beyond the financial aspects, the federal initiatives have
also altered the social relations and dynamics within the university (see Grant and Drakich,
2010; Polster, 2007). Polster (2007), for example, asserts that the Canada Research Chair
Program promotes unhealthy competition between universities and researchers, whose
performance is measured based on income grants rather than academic excellence. On an
institutional level, with the growing importance of research grants so too grows the need to
comply with the accountability requirements of federal and provincial governments (Gauthier,
2004). This makes universities more strategic in planning and in aligning themselves with the
government‟s priorities, which at times do not necessarily account for the differences in the
missions of various higher education institutions. Thus, as Lang (2005) remarks, funding
formulas can have a powerful steering effect, reflecting the New Public Management
approach to „steer from a distance‟ and to use quasi-market instruments.
On this note, referring to Young (2002) and Metcalfe (2010), a strong argument can be made
that academic capitalism has also arrived in Canada and has greatly impacted the university
landscape. In this respect, the changing funding pattern, including rising tuition fees,
14
The federal government has addressed this issue at least partly by the Indirect Cost Program, see chapter 2.2.3.
36
illustrates the policymakers‟ goal to increase the efficiency15
of the higher education system,
based on the neo-liberal premise that “prices indicate 'which of the available technical
methods is most economical in the given circumstances.'” (Young, 2002). Thereby, an
increasingly destabilized environment for universities is created to make them more sensitive
and responsive to the priorities of their funders (Metcalfe, 2010). Yet, in a higher education
system, in which the two levels of government remain the major university funders, the
cooperation and collaboration between them becomes of particular interest in light of their
increased powers to steer universities „from a distance‟. As was alluded to in this chapter, the
federal government has come to play a major role in this changing post-secondary education
landscape; however, the history and the structure of the Canadian federalist system remains
the same and sets the background against which federal and provincial governments define
their respective responsibilities and roles.
2.2. The role of the federal government in post-secondary education in the context of
Canadian federalism
After the overview of the broader global and ideological context, as well as the major changes
and challenges facing Canadian universities, we shall now focus our attention to the historical
context and development of federal-provincial relations in post-secondary education. First, a
brief description of the constitutional division of power and the federal power will be given.
The second sub-chapter summarizes how Ottawa has become involved with universities,
15
The notion of ‘increasing the efficiency of the higher education system’ is widely used in the policy discourse and in the scientific literature, but very rarely it is defined. Generally, the concept of ‘efficiency’ refers to the ratio between input and output. In the context of higher education, input is mostly understood in terms of financial resources. The measurement of the output is more controversial as the definition of the proper indicators continues to be subject of debate. Currently, however, output is commonly measured i.e. as the number of “graduates and time to exam, the number of scientific publications, as well as the ability to acquire external research funds” (Sörlin, 2007: In Meek et al., 2009, p: 128).
37
followed by a more detailed view on developments since 1997 the year the federal
government began running budget surpluses. Finally, we will present in a chronological order
the various policy proposals advanced by various stakeholders in an attempt to improve
federal-provincial cooperation in post-secondary education.
2.2.1. Shared responsibilities: The power of the Constitution vs. the power of money
The constitutional foundation of today‟s federalist system rests to a large extent on the
division of powers as formulated in the Constitution Act of 1867, which provides, in articles
91 to 95, an enumeration of competencies and responsibilities attributed to or shared by the
provincial and federal governments16
. Among the activities over which the federal parliament
has jurisdiction to legislate include trade, national defence, foreign affairs, currency and
interprovincial- and national communication; thus disposing of the constitutional tools to
advance the nation-building process. The provincial parliaments may enact laws in the fields
of social welfare, health, property and civil rights (Art. 92) as well as in education (Art. 93).
In matters of agriculture, immigration (Art. 95) and natural-resources (Art. 92 a.), parliaments
of both government orders can legislate. For areas of legislation that are not exclusively
assigned to the provinces, the so-called “Peace, Order and good Governance” clause
introduced in Article 91 allows the federal government to take action in a national emergency
and on issues of national concern that were not yet taken into consideration by the Fathers of
Confederation (Simeon and Papillon, 2006; Pelletier, 2005).
With the growing complexity and interdependence of policy issues, the courts have (first the
Privy Council and, after 1949 the Supreme Court of Canada), over the years redefined the
16
For a full list of the division of competencies, see Pelletier (2005: p. 56-57).
38
division of powers without changing the constitutional architecture (Simeon and Papillon,
2006). For example, the federal spending power, which has emerged as one of the probably
most powerful and, thus, most controversial instruments of the federal government to exercise
influence in areas of provincial jurisdiction, finds no explicit mention in the Constitution. Yet,
the Supreme Court had declared that “the federal spending power is wider than the field of
federal legislative power” (Telford, 2003). Former Prime Minister Pierre-Elliott Trudeau
defined it as “the power of parliament to make payments to people or institutions or
governments for purposes on which it (parliament) does not necessarily have the power”
(Telford, 2003: p. 25). Nonetheless, some legal scholars peg the constitutionality of the
federal spending power on rather shaky grounds (See Telford, 2003).
2.2.2. From nation building to innovation nation: Justifying the federal intrusion17
The first drastic increase in student attendance after WWII, Canada‟s first crisis in higher
education (see Bissel, 1956) created the rational for a sustained federal government‟s
intervention in higher education matters. Based on the recommendations of the Massey
Commission18
, the federal government provided direct support to the universities, because
they were considered to be contributing to “national strength and unity” (Massey, p.132).
Instead, this resulted in divisions with Québec, whose universities had to refuse the federal
grants on the basis that the provincial government regarded them as an unacceptable intrusion
into provincial jurisdiction. Thus, in 1959, the federal government eventually agreed to
channel the money for post-secondary education indirectly through the government of
Quebec. Nonetheless, various Commission reports continued to support a stronger leadership
17
This chapter draws in particular on Cameron (1991), Fisher et al. (2006) Tupper (2006) and Sheffield (1987),
as well as on individual chapters of the respective Commission reports. 18
The full name is the Royal Commission on National Development in the Arts, Letters and Sciences.
39
role for Ottawa in post-secondary education affairs. A point in case is the Bladen
Commission, which inquired into university finances. Albeit recognizing the provincial
jurisdiction over education, the Commission suggested the creation of a federal ministry for
higher education. Whereas the AUCC, that commissioned the report, endorsed the proposals
wholeheartedly, the provinces created shortly thereafter the Council of Ministers of Education
of Canada (CMEC) to stop the mounting federal intrusion. Hence, in 1969, the federal
government stepped back by announcing that in lieu of supporting universities with direct
grants, it would transfer additional tax points and cash transfers to the provinces covering up
to 50% of the universities‟ operating costs. Hence, by the end of the 1960s, the provinces
reasserted their responsibilities in higher education vis-à-vis the federal government, but
failed to assume leadership. A review by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) in the early 1970s noted the absence of national objectives as well as
the lack of coordination and political leadership. To this end, the organization suggested that
CMEC be reorganized as a national forum for post-secondary education; a suggestion, that
remained ignored by the interprovincial body. In the meantime, the cost sharing program
proved to be very costly for the federal government (Fisher et al., 2006). Without hopes that a
federal-provincial forum would be created any time soon, the cost-sharing program was
substituted with the Established Programs Financing (EPF), which were unconditional block
grants paid through cash transfers and tax points.19
No strings were attached to the transfers
and, thus, the provinces could not be held accountable as to how they spent the money. In
view of the decreasing provincial investments in higher education, the federal government
paid an increasing share for universities‟ budgets, but had little say. This resulted in a series of
initiatives in the mid-1980s to address the mounting frustration on both sides. The Senate
19
For a detailed account of the EPF formula, see Fischer et al. (2006: p. 39-40).
40
Standing Committee on Finance began a study in 1985 on the federal funding of post-
secondary education. In the same year, the Canadian Higher Education Research Network
(CHERN) was created by the Canadian Society for the Study of Higher Education (CSSHE),
established at the University of Ottawa‟s Faculty of Administration with core funding from
the Department of Secretary of State20
. Its mission was to “develop in higher education a
national perspective, provide a forum and the capacity to coordinate the adjustment which the
higher education enterprise will have to go through for the next while” (Paquet, 1988). In the
light of the “excessive provincialization” and the “rigidity and protected nature of the higher
education institution” (Paquet, 1988: p. 2), its director, Gilles Paquet, proposed a national
strategy, in which the federal government “had some responsibility for acting as quarterback”
(p. 5). In short, the vague contours of the strategy included a focus on producing more
research and data about Canada‟s higher education sector, a more strategic approach to
funding and a forum for deliberation. In the same year, the Canadian Association of
University Teachers (CAUT) presented its “Post-Secondary Education Financing Act”
(CAUT, 1985). Making reference to the previously enacted Canada Health Act21
, the CAUT
asserted that the transfers for post-secondary education needed also to be legislated to avoid
further reductions in investments by the provinces. Amongst others, the proposed Act
envisioned a parliamentary declaration of common objectives, a financing scheme that
include incentives for provinces to maintain their relative funding and the creation of a Post-
Secondary Education Advisory Council to conduct research, collect data and inform policy-
makers. Furthermore, in 1987, a National Forum on Post-Secondary Education was held in
20
The Secretary of State was amongst others in charge of coordinating education-related matters. 21
The reference concerned the changes made to the EPF, which consisted of earmarking the respective shares for health and post-secondary education. This was necessary since the contributions for health were tied conditions, in contrast to the transfer for post-secondary education.
41
Saskatoon, co-sponsored by CMEC (Cameron, 1991). There was consensus that discussions
on research, student financial aid, international education, and research on post-secondary
education should be continued. Yet, the impetus given by the national forum did not result in
a sustained process. Finally, a study of the Senate Standing Committee on Finance, published
in 1987, concluded that the EPF should be abolished. Instead, the provinces should receive
larger direct transfers and the federal government should channel its money directly to
students, researchers and institutions (see Fisher et al., 2006). Soon thereafter, however, post-
secondary education largely vanished from the national political agenda amid, first, a
constitutional crisis, followed by a fiscal crisis in the early and mid-1990s.
2.2.3. The „New Paradigm‟ - Federal support for universities since 1997
The former President of the University of Toronto, Robert S. Prichard referred to the
aforementioned shift towards increased federal support for university research as a New
Paradigm (2000). The new approach to supporting university research was initially based on
four federal initiatives, some of which we have already briefly mentioned. The Canada
Foundation for Innovation (CFI), founded in 1997, finances major university infrastructure
projects on the principle of matching funds. It covers 40% of the costs, whereas the remaining
60% are to be financed by the applying institution or a third party, such as provinces or
private sector partners. The second major initiative, the Canada Research Chair Program
(CRC) was announced in the 2000 budget and aimed at retaining or attracting the best
academics in Canada by funding their salaries and research support. The allocations of the
CRCs are based on the applicant‟s past success in obtaining support from the three research
granting councils. In its initial phase, the federal government invested $300m annually, which
amounted to a third of the research granting councils‟ budgets. Taken these two initiatives
42
together, asserts Jones and Young (2004: p. 196), they “represent perhaps the most significant
investments in university research activities in national history”. In addition to those two
flagship initiatives, the Medical Research Council was transformed into the Canadian Institute
for Health Research, with a doubled budget of nearly $500m. The Networks of Centres of
Excellence, created in 1989, became in 1997 a permanent instrument in the federal
government‟s toolbox to enhance the collaboration between researchers from universities,
industry and non-profit organisations in very specific fields of expertise. Furthermore, the
federal government restored the budgets of the three research granting councils and
augmented it in the following years, so that their spending doubled within a couple of years
(Collin and Kerr, 2006). Finally, the federal budget of 2001 included for the first time federal
support to cover the growing indirect costs of universities caused by their enhanced research
activities. Hence, as the chart below illustrates, whereas in 1997/98 university research and
development was funded with $800 million, the main federal agencies and programs22
invested over $2.8 billion in 2008/09 (Collin and Thomson, 2010: p. 15).
22
NSERC, SSHRC, CHRI, CRC, CFI, Indirect Cost Program
43
Chart 1: Federal investments in university research23
Source: Based on the numbers provided by Collin and Kerr (2006) and Collin and Thompson (2010).
Although Ottawa‟s support of the university research has been historically accepted by the
provinces, the “aggressive leadership” (Tupper 2006, p. 17) of the federal government has
resulted in a negative impact on the federal-provincial relationship, for the provinces were not
included in the design of the federal research policy (Shanahan and Jones 2007). The federal-
provincial divide was furthermore exacerbated in two policy fields that are closely
interlinked: federal student financial assistance and federal cash transfers.
With respect to financial student support, the announcement of the Canada Millennium
Scholarship Foundation (CMSF) in the federal budget of 1998 and its subsequent
implementation resulted in a major broil with the provinces. As part of the so-called „Canada
23
Note that Excel 2007 does not offer black and white charts anymore, which is why this chart is only available in colour.
44
Opportunity Strategy‟, the CMSF was based on an endowment of $2.5 billion, with which it
was to support 100,000 students over a time period of ten years. The scholarships were aimed
at students from all post-secondary institutions on the basis of demonstrated financial need
and academic merit. Hastily created and without any prior consultation with the provinces, the
new foundation was fiercely opposed by the provinces, especially Quebec (see Cameron,
2004). Because the Millennium Scholarships were not to be administered through the existing
provincial mechanism, so as to establish a direct relationship between the federal government
and Canadians and increase its visibility, provinces considered this initiative as a clear
intrusion into provincial jurisdiction. The federal government eventually conceded to
negotiate separate agreements with each province with respect to the implementation of the
CMSF. Nonetheless, the debate on the effectiveness of the CMSF continued. The program
was criticized for failing to improve accessibility for low and middle income families, since it
was granted only to students who were already enrolled in university (see Fisher, 2006). As
well, a frequent criticism was that the CMSF may have simply substituted existing provincial
funds, rather than complemented them (Cameron, 2004). Other studies refute this suggestion
(see Samson & Associates, 2007).
In any case, for several years federal transfers have led to much frustration among federal
bureaucrats and politicians. Hence, in 1995, the EPF and the Canada Assistance Plan (CAP)
were combined to create the Canada Health and Social Transfer (CHST). More important than
the integrated funding mechanisms were the reductions amounting to 37%. The provincial
anger over the transfer reductions was further mounting when it became apparent that the
federal government did not intend to restore the transfers with the subsequent budget
surpluses, but rather decided to channel the money towards „boutique programs‟, such as the
45
Millennium Scholarship Foundation, that established a direct relationship of Ottawa with
Canadian citizens in areas of provincial jurisdiction. The search of the federal government for
greater visibility among Canadians and its attempts to establish through its spending power
prerogatives a direct relationship with citizens in areas of increasing importance, such as
education, has become even more significant and politically salient with the near-separation
of Quebec in 1995. Hence, investing in the future of Canada‟s Youth has become for Ottawa‟s
politicians not only a matter of economic and social importance, but also of „nation
(re)building”. In an attempt to establish the new „rulebook‟ as to how both levels of
jurisdictions should cooperate and interact, the provinces and the federal government entered
into social unions talks, during which several provinces signalled their openness to national
principles in post-secondary education.24
Eventually, the Social Union Framework Agreement
(SUFA) was signed off by all Anglophone Premiers; Quebec opted out. What some saw as
potentially the “most far reaching reform in the workings of the federation” since the
Constitution Act of 1982 (Lazar, 2000: p.2), turned out not to be sustainable. The federal
government could claim a symbolic victory by having recognized its substantial role in social
policy. But at the same time, the SUFA failed to put clear restraints on the federal spending
power in areas of provincial jurisdiction (Shanahan and Jones, 2006). Moreover, Ottawa was
bound to negotiate and consult the provinces before launching any new initiatives in areas of
social policy. As the federal government needed only the approval of a majority of the
provinces, it could initiate and impose new programs without the support of any of the big
provinces, such as Ontario, British Columbia and Alberta (Telford, 2003). Despite the new
framework, funding for post-secondary education was even more scarce as provinces had to
fight their own budget deficits. Further, this was so in the context where health costs had
24
Greenspon E.“Social Union talks a balancing act”, The Globe and Mail, 8 August 1998; See also Lazar (2000).
46
become the overriding issue (Jones and Young, 2004). Thus, in 2003, the federal government
decided to split the CHST into the Canada Health Transfer (CHT) and the Canada Social
Transfer (CST), explaining that this would increase visibility and transparency, in particular
with respect to health spending. The federal share for post-secondary education attributed now
through the CST remained, however, still undefined. Unlike the Canada Health Act, there was
no conditionality attached to the cash transfers. Eventually, the federal budget of 2007 (see
Canada, 2007) earmarked for the first time the percentage of the CST dedicated to post-
secondary education, set at 25%, including an escalator mechanism of an annual increase of
three percent25
.
Collin and Thomson (2010) conclude that the significant increase in spending for post-
secondary education was built on the rationale that the return in investments benefits not only
the individual, but society at large. The main focus of the investments was capacity building
in Canada‟s post-secondary education system, more specifically with respect to the university
research enterprise. Regarding student assistance, while prior to 1998 support was provided
primarily through the CSLP and tax credits, considerable sums of non-repayable payments,
such as grants and scholarships, have been provided under the new paradigm. For instance, in
2009/2010, the Canada Student Grant26
(CSG) consisted of an annual investment of $350
million; the expenditures for the Canada Graduate Scholarships amounted to $126 million in
2008/09. Furthermore, tax-related measures for education and training purposes have been
expanded considerably. In contrast, even though the federal transfers for post-secondary
education have been augmented under the Conservative government, totalling $3.3 billion in
25
Took effect during the 2008/09 fiscal year. 26
The CSG, as announced in the 2008 budget, integrates the Canada Study Grant and Canada Access Grant, as
well as the bursaries offered by the Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation CMSF. In comparison, the CMSF in 2007 spent bursaries amounting to $357 million (see Collin and Thomson, 2010).
47
2009/10, their relative share of the total spending on post-secondary education has remained
lower than before the 1995-reductions. It is not surprising that in light of the dichotomy
between the constitutional powers of the provinces, which have also become more assertive
towards universities (see Shanahan and Jones, 2006) and the financial strength of the federal
government, the confusion over who is responsible for what has been mounting equally. This
has resulted in a blurring of the division of responsibilities (2006) and an „uncoordinated
entanglement‟ (Tupper, 2006), containing much potential for intergovernmental tension. For
Fisher et al. (2006), Canada‟s journey to becoming a knowledge society has been
accompanied by growing intergovernmental tensions. It comes as no surprise, then, that
several authors note a lack of intergovernmental coordination of post-secondary education
policies. The suggested solutions, however, remain, for the most part, vague. Whereas Tupper
(2006) urges simply for better intergovernmental coordination in higher education policy,
Cameron (2004) speaks of the need for a social contract, in which federal and provincial
governments together embrace “the interests of students, faculty, administration, and the
general public”. Gauthier (2004) also speaks of a social contract, which shall substitute
performance contracts and include all stakeholders in higher education in a cooperative
manner. Noting that both “skill building” and “innovation” are critical to an innovative
Canadian economy, Metcalfe (2009) demands an inter-ministerial and cross-agency program
development in terms of research policy. Fisher and Rubenson (2006) demand the creation of
a national post-secondary education strategy, with Learning and Knowledge as its “key
elements” (p. 128).
The call for more coordination and collaboration is not limited to scientific literature. The
next chapter presents some of the main ideas, positions and proposals by stakeholder groups
48
that seek to clarify the respective roles of the federal and provincial governments in post-
secondary education since 1997.
2.2.4. Looking forward: Policy ideas and proposals since 1997
In 1996, on the initiative of Senator Lorne Bonnell, the Standing Senate Committee on Social
Affairs, Science and Technology of the Senate of Canada launched extensive consultations
“to inquire into the „serious state of post-secondary education in Canada‟ (SSCPSE, 1997).
Although, a year later, the Senate Committee came to the conclusion that Canada‟s higher
education sector was not yet in a crisis, it asserted that it was time for the federal government
to act. The main theme of its recommendations was that the federal government had to “renew
its strong commitment to post-secondary education”, and “establish a mechanism to enhance
the performance of its appropriate role in post-secondary education”. Yet, the Senate
Committee remained vague on the nature of this leadership. Whereas a national ministry on
education was seen as unconstitutional, the federal government ought to play the role of a
coordinator, facilitating the collaboration between the federal departments, provincial
authorities, universities, associations and foreign governments.
In 2002, for the second time after 1985, the Canadian Association of University Teachers,
CAUT, proposed a Canadian Post-Secondary Education (PSE) Act (2002). Again, inspired by
the Canada Health Act, the PSE Act aims at establishing long-term and predictable funding
commitments from the federal government, as well as defining common standards and
principles in the delivery of post-secondary education throughout the country. To implement
these objectives, the CAUT advocates for the creation of a separate Post-Secondary Education
Fund which would be constituted of a cash value of 0.3% of the GDP. Effectively, the
49
Canadian Social Transfer in its current form would be abolished. As well, to qualify for these
cash transfers, provinces would have to respect principles such as public administration
accessibility, collegial governance, comprehensiveness and academic freedom. Finally, the
PSE Act foresees the establishment of an advisory council on post-secondary education,
reporting to parliament and advising the Minister of Human Resources and Skills
Development. This policy proposal was endorsed by, amongst others, the Canadian Labour
Congress, the Canadian Federation of Students and the Fédération québécoise des
professeures et professeurs d‟université.
Three years later, in 2005, the Canadian Federation on Humanities and Social Sciences
launched the „National Dialogue on Higher Education‟ by organizing a major conference
bringing together the major players and stakeholders. The urgency for a national dialogue was
explained with the mounting challenges the higher education system faces and the difficult
political context with respect to federal-provincial relations. With regards to the latter,
conference participants appeared to be optimistic: “Sans faire montre de naïveté ni imaginer
qu‟on pouvait combler le fossé sur tous les plans, les représentants fédéraux et provinciaux
ont donné l‟impression que la future collaboration était plus susceptible de survenir que ce
que bon nombre de participants avaient escompté » (CanFed, 2006 : p. 12). The conference
report concludes that « un fédéralisme concerté, coopératif et constructif » (p. 16) will be
needed for a pan-Canadian collaboration. However, the follow-up conference, which was
announced in the report for the following year and was supposed to result in a roadmap for,
amongst other, future federal-provincial collaboration in the higher education, never took
place.
50
Instead, it was the provinces which took the lead in directing the debate. The newly created
Council of the Federation made post-secondary education one of the key issues at their
gathering in Banff in August 200527
. Six months later, a summit on post-secondary education
and skills‟ was convened under the title “Competing for tomorrow”, co-hosted by the
Premiers of Ontario and Quebec. Again, the summit brought together stakeholders, including
students, college, university and business professors as well as other Premiers, to identify key
issues28
and challenges in Canada‟s post-secondary system29
. One stakeholder was missing,
though. The federal government was not among the invitees. Not surprisingly then, the
follow-up report “Competing for tomorrow – A strategy for post-secondary education and
skills in Canada” (CoF, 2006) reads less like a strategy or roadmap, rather than a pledge for
more federal money. Its concluding remarks note: “The objectives outlined in this strategy
require additional investments to those made by the provinces and territories. (…) In their
works, minister noted that federal transfers to provinces and territories for post-secondary
education and skills training had been reduced (…) Premiers will now engage the federal
government to ensure that provinces and territories can meet the needs of Canada‟s post-
secondary education and skills training systems for the benefit of all Canadians” (p. 9- 10).
Nonetheless, the priority areas identified by the Council of the Federation were welcomed by
stakeholders, such as the Canadian Council on Learning (CCL). Even the Conservative
government, which stressed the need for clarification of the federal and provincial roles in
27
The Council of the Federation, Communique, 12 August 2005,
http://www.councilofthefederation.ca/pdfs/communique_aug12.pdf (accessed 10 April 2010). 28
The identified issues were to: Improve access, enhance quality, increase participation in the skilled labour
force, skills for the 21st century workplace and expand research and innovation.
29 See also: The Council of the Federation, Media Advisory “Premier McGuinty and Premiers Charest to host
national stakeholder summit on post-secondary education and skills”, 23 February 2006,
http://www.councilofthefederation.ca/pdfs/Advisory_feb_23eng.pdf ( accessed on 10 April 2010).
51
post-secondary education in its budget in 2006 (Canada, 2006), saw the work done by the
Council of the Federation as an important step in the right direction (Canada, 2007).
Established under the Liberal government, the Canadian Council on Learning has become,
together with the CAUT, one of the most vocal advocates for a national post-secondary
education strategy. Led by the former General Director of CMEC, Paul Cappon, the Council
first published a report in 2006, entitled „Canadian Post-secondary Education: A positive
record – An uncertain future”, which was its first stocktaking made of the national higher
education landscape. Reviewing all provincial and territorial post-secondary education
policies and strategies, it concluded that there are common objectives, which could serve as a
starting point for a national dialogue. The second annual report, released in December 2007,
provided a roadmap with conditions and strategies for the development of a pan-Canadian
strategy. Accordingly, the two main requirements were, first, a national PSE data strategy,
which would provide information necessary for governments, citizens, researchers as well as
higher education leaders to make decisions and design effective policies. Rather then
featuring „league tables‟, the CCL data strategy proposed to define a set of indicators and
benchmarks. Second, the report lays out the various fora in which decisions involving all
stakeholders and governments could be taken and implemented.
Making reference to the CCL‟s report deploring the lack of a national strategy in higher
education, in February 2007, the NDP Member of Parliament Denise Savoie (Victoria)
introduced the Private Member‟s Bill C-398, entitled “Canada Post-Secondary Education
Act”, in the House of Commons.30
This was the direct result of the CAUT‟s lobbying efforts,
30 See http://denisesavoie.ndp.ca/node/181 (accessed 1 February 2011).
52
whose draft bill was taken over by the NDP Education critic. Subsequently, the bill was
submitted to the Library of Parliament, which made several modifications.31
For example,
unlike CAUT‟s suggestion, the revised bill does not include the creation of a Post-Secondary
Education Advisory Council. The NDP proposal received little media coverage, although
student leaders drew some attention to it when protesting against the high tuition fees a few
days after the bill was introduced. The bill passed the first reading in October 2007, but the
process was effectively discontinued with the federal elections a year later. The Canada Post-
Secondary Education Act was re-introduced a second time in March 2011 by the then NDP
Education critic Niki Ashton. Bill C-635 did not make it to the first reading because of the
federal elections in May 2011.
In his previous position as the President of the University of Waterloo, Governor General
David Johnston, advocated for a “Canadian Innovation and Learning Act”, or, in short, a
“Smart Nation Act”. Making reference to the Canada Health Act, Johnston argued that
Canadians must address not only their physical, but also their intellectual health. Pointing to
the internationally compared low level of R&D investments and the lagging production of
advanced degrees, his vision consists of establishing national objectives in terms of creating
education opportunities for everyone at every stage of life, and investing in learning and
skills, as well as enacting measures to increase the investments in research and development.
Finally, the proposition that perhaps received the most media attention, not least because of its
controversial nature, was the suggestion by the G532
-University Presidents to effectively
create a two-tiered higher education system, in which the major research universities would
receive additional funds for their research, based on their previous academic and research
31 This information is based on a confidential interview with a person involved in the process of drafting Bill C-398. 32 University of Montreal, University of Alberta, University of British Columbia, University of Toronto, McGill University.
53
performance.33
The objective would be to further support their status as world class
universities by having a stronger focus on producing graduates at the Master and Ph.D. level,
attracting more international students and faculty, and having greater latitude in determining
tuition fee levels as well as financial student assistance. Meanwhile, smaller universities
would receive a clearer mandate focused primarily on undergraduate students.
In sum, the increased investments of the federal government in the university sector in the
past years have been paralleled by a number of proposals how to enhance the
intergovernmental coordination. The debate includes national associations, political parties as
well as university presidents. The provincial governments have also made efforts to bring all
stakeholders to the table and nurture a pan-Canadian dialogue. Yet, they have deliberately
excluded the federal government, which raises questions about their intentions in fostering a
pan-Canadian debate without the major funder. Neither the various policy proposals nor the
national conferences have resulted in much and continued media attention, let alone the
establishment of a Canadian post-secondary education strategy, or Act. This brings us to the
next chapter, which proposes our research question.
2.3. Summary and research question
The goal of this literature review is to provide the reader with an outline of the major forces
and developments in Canadian higher education. Reflected in the scholarly literature is the
critical role attributed to universities in proposing solutions to emerging economic and social
issues. A paradigm shift has been driving the redefinition of the state in post-secondary
33 Wells P., “Our universities can be smarter”, MacLeans Magazine, 28 July 2009.
54
education: Away from a nationally-focused, post-industrial economy supported by a welfare
state based on elaborate social safety networks, towards a globally connected knowledge-
based economy, in which human capital and innovation-driven research constitute the key to
sustainable economic growth and competitive global advantage, and where the state relies
increasingly on the individual‟s self-responsibility. This paradigm shift has inevitably altered
expectations and beliefs as to what mission higher education institutions are to fulfill and how
they ought to be governed. It is thus not surprising that the advent of the knowledge-based
economy in other federalist states has led to intergovernmental tensions and reforms with
respect to education. This is mainly because both central authorities and local governments
have come to recognize knowledge and human resources as the main drivers to nourish and
sustain their competitive advantage. The examples from Europe, Germany and Australia
illustrate how higher education reforms have resulted in lengthy debates and power shifts with
respect to the management of the higher education and university research enterprise.
Alas, what about Canada? Scholars have traditionally depicted the Canadian post-secondary
education system(s) as somewhat unique and distinct from other systems, mostly due to the
federalist and decentralized nature of the university and college landscape. Yet, the federal
and provincial policies regarding universities have faced very similar challenges as other
jurisdictions following trends such as privatization of funding sources, the introduction of
public management tools to increase accountability and the push towards commercialization
of public research. Academic capitalism, as Metcalfe (2010) asserts, has now also arrived in
Canada. Metcalfe‟s scholarly work stands, in our view, for a new approach to Canadian
higher education research insofar as she seeks to adopt a stronger theoretical focus, moves
away from province-to-province studies, and questions the Canadian “exceptionalism” in
55
higher education. Nonetheless, we agree with Jones (2004) that the Canadian case is particular
with respect to the fact that, to date, the federal and provincial roles in higher education have
still not been clarified. We shall add that not only have they not been clarified, but despite a
continuous underlying debate about the lack of intergovernmental coordination and numerous
public higher education dialogues and conferences, there have not been any serious attempts
of decision-makers to put it on the intergovernmental agenda. Canadian higher education
scholars have therefore called for a common vision and a more coordinated approach.
However, the literature provides only limited insights into the reasons why there has not been
more collaboration between both levels of governments in this crucial policy field.
Researchers have typically adopted a state-centrist‟s approach, looking primarily at the
federal-provincial relations in the broader context of Canadian federalism. Hence, the
literature has missed several important aspects. First, no attempt has been made to explain the
policy stability on theoretical grounds. Second, very little attention has been paid to other
actors, such as interest groups and think tanks, which of course influence the discourse. Third,
it follows from the state-centered approach that policy stability was understood primarily in
terms of the structure of the political system, but not so much from the view point of the
involved stakeholders. Finally, when discussing the actions of key decision-makers, there is a
somewhat implicit assumption that they are driven only by self-interest. Therefore, building
on the literature review, we shall aim at filling at least some of these knowledge gaps with
respect to our understanding of the Canadian post-secondary education system. The research
question that will guide our analysis is: Why is there, to date, no pan-Canadian strategy or
institution to coordinate the policies of the federal and provincial governments in post-
secondary education?
56
In order to address this question from a theoretical perspective, we have opted to use the
Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) by Paul Sabatier and Hank Jenkins-Smith. The ACF
suits our needs in several respects. It focuses on policy change and policy stability, which is
understood as a function of the interplay between the actors, grouped into Advocacy
Coalitions, within a specific policy subsystem. The ACF allows for a comprehensive analysis
as it takes into account the structure of the policy environment, as well as the actors‟ beliefs
and resources. The following chapter will present the theoretical approach in more detail.
3. HIGHER EDUCATION, PUBLIC POLICY THEORIES AND THE ADVOCACY
COALITION FRAMEWORK
To begin with, our theoretical discussion will first look at the use, or the lack thereof, of
public policy theories in the field of higher education research. The second sub-chapter will
then give an overview of the ACF, followed by explaining how the ACF has been applied
previously by higher education researchers and how it will be utilized in our analysis.
3.1. Public policy sciences in higher education
Traditionally, public policy scholars have paid little attention to higher education as a field of
study. Even though most universities in developed countries rely substantially on public
funds, higher education has long been attributed a special status in the general stream of
public policy analysis. Ferlie et al. (2008) explain this peculiarity with the Mertonian
principles, according to which universities need to be autonomous to be able to fulfill their
57
role as producers of scientific knowledge. Because of the uniqueness of the mission of higher
education institutions, that is, the advancement and preservation of knowledge, their
governance must be different than the ones from other public institutions. However, since the
end of the 1980s, this view has become under much scrutiny. Since the neoliberal paradigm
change in the public sector, calling for more accountability and cost-efficiency, on the one
hand, and the massification of higher education, on the other hand, higher education issues
have become the subject of much public and political debate (Ferlie et al., 2008; Meek et al.,
1991; Tight, 2004).
Nonetheless, the application of public policy theories to higher education issues has been only
very recent. Jones‟ (1994) observation that most of the research on higher education policy
issues is atheoretical was reiterated even a decade later by McLendon (2003). Tight (2004)
supported these assertions with evidence illustrating that scientific articles on higher
education issues, from national policy to teaching methods, were rarely based on explicit
theoretical approaches. In most studies, theoretical assumptions were made only implicitly
and a broader theoretical engagement was missing. However, since the proposed research
agenda by McLendon (2003), there has been more theoretical engagement among higher
education policy scholars. Referring to Jones‟ (1994) suggestion to frame the theoretical
debates on higher education policy in terms of Alford and Friedland‟s analysis of political
theories presenting three distinct public policy paradigms, several theoretical approaches have
found application in the said policy field.
First, theories based on the managerial paradigm focus on the role of the state, namely on the
processes, measures and instruments through which the state seeks to steer the higher
education sector. In particular, the implementation analysis (Gornitzka et al. 2005; Hagman,
58
2005; Kogan, 2005) and the Principal-Agent-Theorie (Lande and Kivisto, 2008; McLendon,
2003; Gornitzka et al., 2004) have been used in recent studies of higher education systems in
the U.S., as well as in Europe and Australia. Second, the perspective of theories belonging to
the so-called critical paradigm look at the mentalities, social norms and discourses which
constitute the framework directing human actions. In that regard, Michel Faucoult‟s concept
of “governmentality” emerges as an increasingly popular analytical tool in higher education
literature, in particular in the context of the Bologna reform in Europe (Croché, 2008; Kupfer,
2008). Finally, the pluralist paradigm analyses higher education issues in terms the interests
and pressure groups, their strategies, resources, linkages, ideas and interests, thereby mostly
focusing on the policymaking process. As Ness (2010) illustrates, McLendon‟s (2003)
suggestion to utilize policy process theories more systematically has resulted in a number of
articles on higher education issues referring to the most successful theories, such as
Kindgon‟s Multiple Streams Model, the punctuated equilibrium, the diffusion of policy
innovations model and the Advocacy Coalition Framework. It is the latter one that we have
chosen as a theoretical lens to guide our research. The following two sections shall thus
discuss, first, the main attributes of this theoretical framework and the scholarly debate around
it; and second, its application to higher education research, the rationale for selecting this
theoretical approach and how it will guide us in our research.
3.2. The Advocacy Coalition Framework : A short overview
The Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF) was developed by Paul Sabatier and Hank
Jenkins-Smith and emerged in the late 1980s from the implementation analysis, rejecting the
59
traditional stages heuristic model and trying to combine the advantages of both the bottom-up
and top-down approaches (Sabatier, 1986; Sabatier, 2005). Referred to as the most promising
and successful theories in public policy (see Saint-Pierre, 2004), the goal of the ACF is to
understand and explain policy change or stability through belief systems, rather than interests.
In the following section, we shall first outline its main structure and amendment, and then
discuss how the ACF explains policy change.
For the ACF, the primary level of analysis of is the policy subsystem. The focus goes beyond
the “iron triangle”, which includes government, legislative committees and formal interest
groups, but can entail also actors such as specialized journalists, experts and judicial officials.
As Sabatier (2007: p. 193) notes, defining the right scope of a policy subsystem is the “most
important aspect of an ACF research project”. Within the policy subsystem, individuals or
organizations are aggregated into so-called advocacy coalitions, which are the main actors in
the policymaking process. There are typically between two and four advocacy coalitions in a
policy subsystem, although Saint-Pierre (2004) demonstrates that in rare cases there might
also be only one advocacy coalition. The advocacy coalitions are bound together by a
common belief structure and a nontrivial degree of coordination. Note that in the ACF model,
the concept of beliefs is understood in a rather broad way and, according to its authors, are
closely correlated with self-interest. The belief system builds on three categories. First, the
deep core beliefs are of a very basic, ontological and normative nature, and unlikely to
change, “essentially akin to a religious conversion” (Sabatier and Jenkins, 1999). Deep core
beliefs are defined by the relative priority accorded to notions such as liberty, equality or
market vs. state regulation. Second, the policy core beliefs, receive the most attention in the
ACF analyses. In contrast to deep core belief, policy core beliefs are limited to a specific
60
policy subsystem, and although they are rather unlikely to change, they must be subject to
adjustment due to new information or experience. Finally, the secondary beliefs, which are
more likely to be altered than the two former belief categories, are much more narrow in
scope and refer to technical and procedural questions. The belief system is based on the
premise that the individual‟s perception of the world is determined by cognitive biases and
constraints. In other words, although the actor is assumed to act rationally, he or she perceives
reality through a lens. Information is thus selected and processed through a lens,
predetermined by the actor‟s values and beliefs. Sabatier and Jenkins‟ framework follow thus
at least partly the tradition of the bounded rationality, inherent in other theories, such as
Kingdon‟s multiple streams model or the Garbage Can model. Furthermore, in order to pursue
their policy goals, advocacy coalitions rely on resources in addition to that of financial and
human resources, such as Members of Parliament or agency officials, which have the formal
legal authority to make decisions. A particularly important resource is specialized
information, which explains why the ACF attributes a major role to scientists in the policy
process. The interaction in the policy subsystem is affected by two exogenous factors. First,
there are the relatively stable system parameters, such as the basic distribution of natural
resources, fundamental socio-cultural values and basic constitutional structures. Although
they remain unchanged for most of the time, they influence the behaviour of advocacy
coalitions. The second group of factors called external system events, including changes in
socio-economic conditions, changes in systemic governing coalition and policy decisions and
impacts from other subsystems are more likely to occur and may have a fundamental impact
on the dynamics in the policy subsystem.
61
On the basis of this (original) framework, composed of the policy subsystem and advocacy
coalitions on the one hand, and the two exogenous elements, the relatively stable parameters
and the external system events, on the other hand, policy change may occur in two ways.
Change through policy oriented-learning “refers to relatively enduring alterations of thought
or behavioral intentions that result from experience and/or new information and that are
concerned with the attainment or revision of policy objectives” (Sabatier and Jenkins, 1999).
In other words, policy oriented-learning is more likely to affect secondary beliefs, and
therefore leads to minor policy change. In contrast, major policy change more likely happens
when one of the above mentioned external events occurs, thereby creating a shock in the
policy subsystem and altering the composition or resources of the advocacy coalitions. These
external shocks have the potential to change the rather stable and resistant policy core beliefs
of advocacy coalitions.
Table 1: The Advocacy Coalition Framework (Weible et al., 2009)
62
Upon this basic structure of the ACF, Sabatier and Weible (2007) identifies three major
additions to the framework: First, a third external factor to account for the corporatist regimes
in Europe, the so-called Coalition Opportunity structures, which determine the degree of
consensus needed for major policy change and the openness of a political system; second, a
typology of policy-relevant resources; and, third, whereas the earlier ACF version argued that
policy change could be triggered only from outside the subsystem, because of the bounded
rationality of the involved actors, the third major revision consists of acknowledging the
possibility of an internal shock.34
The authors‟ approach to developing the theory following the motto “we want to be clear
enough to be proven wrong”, has naturally invited its critics. Olson (2009) and Dudley et al.
(2000), for instance, deplore the unspoken ambition of Paul Sabatier and his disciples to
develop a policy process model that parallels the rigor traditionally known from the natural
sciences. However, perhaps the most debated issue relevant for our research was the
underlying assumption of the ACF that shared beliefs and values will automatically result in
coordinated behaviour. In particular Schlager (1995) criticized that the ACF does not address
the collective action problem. In other words, it cannot explain why an actor has an interest in
investing time and energy to coordinate a common strategy with other coalition members if
they act in his interest anyway without his help (i.e. the free-rider problem). Furthermore, she
points to the fact that very little attention has been paid to the structure of coalitions, with its
various degrees of coordination, and to their strategies. Hence, Schlager (1995) makes the
point that instead of focusing on beliefs, policy analysts should concentrate rather on the
second criteria of coalition building, the non-trivial degree of coordination. For that purpose,
34
Note that although these additions to the ACF may certainly contribute to a better understanding of the policy process, our research will not focus on these new aspects.
63
she suggests complementing the ACF with the Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD)
framework, according to which coalitions are more likely to emerge when organizing costs
are relatively low and “individuals believe that by acting collectively to change policy they
will be made better off” (Schlager, 1995: p. 249). Thus, the IAD analysis is based on a
rational choice actor model and underlines the importance of repeated and regular interaction
between the actors. However, as Kübler (2001) rightfully notes, the rational choice
assumptions are not compatible with the ACF. As previously stated, in line with the bounded
rationality argument, the ACF asserts that the thinking process of an individual is much more
complex since each actor perceives reality differently. A first response to Schlager‟s criticism
by Zafonte and Sabatier (1998) consisted of distinguishing between “weak” and “strong”
coordination. Weak coordination refers to coalition members with the same beliefs that pursue
similar strategies, but don‟t necessarily meet each other to formally coordinate. In contrast, a
strong coordination presupposes the development of a common strategy to influence policy
decisions and policy images. Sabatier (2007) complements the response by referring to two
other rationales of the ACF. First, common beliefs and high trust among its adherents lower
transaction costs. Second, because of a distorted, strongly negative perception of their
opponents (referred to as devil shift), coalition members tend to exaggerate the expected
benefits of common action and are therefore more likely to invest themselves in an advocacy
coalition.
Perhaps the most promising path to a better understanding of the collective action issue in the
ACF is to look deeper into the network structures and properties of the policy subsystem.
Kübler (2001), for example, utilizes the concept of „mobilizing structures‟. This conceptual
lens studies the social network in terms of its incentive structures, its organizational resources,
64
such as the provision of know-how and communication technologies, and its cognitive factors
influencing the motivation of individuals to act collectively. Drawing on the inter-
organizational relations and policy network literature, a second, more prominent approach is
to integrate the concept of „interdependencies‟ into the ACF. Interdependency can be defined
as “the condition by which the actions of one actor interfere with or contribute to the goal of
achievement of another actor” (Chisholm, 1989: In Zafonte and Sabatier, 1998). It was
Zafonte and Sabatier (1998) who opened the discussion about „functional interdependencies‟
as an alternative or additional mechanism to study coordinated behavior. It is asserted that a
higher frequency of coordination is expected when “overlapping functions induce (or
produce) interactions between organizations and individuals who share similar beliefs”
(Zafonte and Sabatier, 1998). Whereas Zafonte and Sabatier (1998) apply this concept
primarily to coalitions in overlapping policy subsystems, Fenger and Klok (20021) also apply
it to explain the behaviour of coalitions within policy subsystems, adding the subcategories of
competitive interdependency (“where the action of one actor interferes with another actor‟s
ability to take action or achieve his goals” (p.162)) and symbiotic interdependency (“The
situation where one actor‟s actions contribute to another actor‟s actions or goal achievement”
(p. 162)).
65
Table 2: Coalition behaviour as the result of interdependency and belief congruence (Fenger and Klok, 2001:
164)
Furthermore, they assert that actors don‟t necessarily have to agree over values and beliefs, an
instead may have independent or indifferent belief systems. In such cases, interdependency
plays an important role since it may result in coordination. Hence, responding to Schlager
(1995), Fenger and Klok (2001) expect severe coalition action problems only in situations in
which beliefs are congruent and the interdependency is competitive (see Table 1). Hence, the
interdependency structures of a policy subsystem influence coalition formation and, thus,
policy change.
3.3. Applying the ACF in higher education
As Weible et al.‟s (2009) stocktaking of the ACF shows, Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith‟s model
has been applied across various policy fields, mostly in the environmental and energy policy
area. As table 2 (see below) illustrates, the ACF has been applied only a few times in higher
66
education research, each time with a slightly different focus. Whereas Beverwijk et al. (2008)
and Shakespeare (2008) utilize the ACF in a stringent manner, discussing the theoretical
implications of their empirical research, other articles or papers apply the framework in a very
general manner, without demonstrating much theoretical vigour.
Table 3: The ACF in higher education research
Article Subject of research ACF focus Theoretical
conclusion
Beverwijk,
Goedegebuure and
Huisman (2008)
Policy
developments in
Mozambican higher
education
- Beliefs in nascent subsystem
- Major policy change in unstable
context
- Role of beliefs and resources in
common action
- “ACF built on
assumptions that
do not
necessarily apply
to countries with
a high degree of
civil and political
turbulence” (p.
376).
Shakespeare (2008) Budget process for
state tuition program
in New York State
- Advocacy Coalitions and their
information usage in the policy
process
- “ACF useful for
organizing New
York‟s policy-
making arena
into a structure
for analysis” (p.
894)
Kent (2005) Policy change in
Mexican higher
education in the
1980‟s and 1990‟s
- Explains major policy change and
shift in belief system with external
event
- More recent change are understood
as change of secondary beliefs
- Only partial
application of
ACF – no
theoretical
conclusions
Mora and Vidal
(2005)
Developments in
Spanish higher
education
- Reference to ACF is made in the
introduction, but no specific ACF
focus apparent
- No theoretical
conclusions
Sabatier (2005) himself provides possible explanations for the reluctance of higher education
scholars to apply the ACF. Besides the aforementioned observation that “higher education
researchers do not stay abreast of theoretical developments in the general public policy
literature” (p. 31), he speculates that in higher education there may be little potential for high
goal conflict and competing belief systems and, thus little use for the ACF. Furthermore,
Sabatier advances the possibility that actors in the higher education sector are more neutral
67
than in other policy areas, not being members of advocacy coalitions. Why, then, have we
opted to be inspired by the ACF nonetheless, and how will it assist us in responding to the
research question?
The ACF provides for a valuable theoretical lens in several respects. First, the ACF combines
a structural or non-cognitive analysis with a focus on the subjective or cognitive belief and
value systems of the actors. We believe that an in-depth analysis into our research question
needs to go beyond the reading of traditional Canadian federalism studies and take into
account the way by which policymakers perceive these structures and the role each institution
or level of government ought to play in it. The actors‟ perception of a policy environment and
of the issues in question is crucial to understanding their position and policy proposals.
Second, the focus on the actors‟ beliefs and, thereby, their perception of the policy
environment helps us to explain not only the constellations in which they are grouped, but
also to understand the sort of policy proposals and instruments they put forward. More
importantly, given that beliefs and values are said to be relatively stable over time, the ACF
offers an interesting explanation for policy stability or, simply, inactivity. The comparison of
differing belief systems is even more interesting in a policy area, such as higher education,
which has received increased attention by the public and policymakers due to its instrumental
role in securing economic growth and social prosperity. Finally, whereas most literature on
intergovernmental relations in post-secondary education in Canada examined the issue from a
political system level, the ACF‟s perspective from a policy subsystem level allows for a more
differentiated insight into positions of and relations between organizations and, occasionally,
individuals directly involved in the policy process.
68
4. METHODOLOGY35
According to Singleton and Straits (1999: p. 18), what distinguishes science as a form of
knowledge production from metaphysics, philosophy or mythology are the characteristics of
its product, such as laws, principles and theories, and the process by which scientific
knowledge is produced. Three key principles underlie the scientific process: empiricism (only
observable data or information is acceptable), objectivity (or intersubjective testability, which
implies that, under the same conditions and given the same observations, two or more
researchers come to the same conclusions) and control (procedures to avoid or minimize
misleading or biased results). Hence, in light of the above proposed theoretical approach, we
thus shall now describe in detail the process by which the empirical evidence is gathered and
analyzed. First, in light of the methodologies proposed by Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith (1993),
the process of data collection and analysis will be explained. The second subsection will
discuss any limitations to the data and research project in general, clarify the premises of the
research question and present briefly how ethical considerations with regards to the conduct
of interviews are taken into account.
4.1. Data collection and analysis
Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith (1993) propose various methodologies to apply the ACF: elite
survey, panels of knowledgeable observers and content analysis of relevant documents, as
35
The methodological approach was inspired by Gauthier (2009), in particular chapters 3, 5, 13, 16 and 19.
69
well as government documents and interest-group publications36
. Accordingly, our empirical
evidence is composed of three sets of data.
The principal set of data refers to a total of nineteen interviews that have been conducted
between January and June 2011. The first set of participants (AUCC, CAUT, CASA, CSF,
CanFed, NSERC, CFI) was determined based on information contained in the literature
review and a brief analysis of the participants invited regularly to participate in the federal
pre-budgetary consultations between 1997 and 2009. The second set of participants
(Conference Board of Canada, CCL, Public Policy Forum, NDP, HECQO, G13-University
President) were selected based on the snowballing technique, wherein, in the course of the
first round of interviews, participants were asked to name the most important organizations
with which they have partnered or which in their view exercise relevant influence on the
federal government‟s higher education and research policy. The snowballing technique is
necessary insofar as it helps to determine the policy subsystem. The third set of participants
was constituted of representatives of the provinces. Out of four requests for interviews, two
provincial education ministry officials, from Ontario and Nova Scotia respectively, agreed to
participate37
. Ontario was selected because it is the largest Anglophone province, with the
highest number of higher education institutions and due to its traditional strong position in
intergovernmental affairs. In contrast, Nova Scotia represents the Atlantic Provinces, which
traditionally have been much less influential in the national context. Nova Scotia in particular
has also struggled in the past with high tuition fees and high student debts.
36
Weible et al.„s (2009) stocktaking of the ACF has shown that besides the significant number of ACF articles which do not
specify the methodological approach (over 40%), the most frequently used methods to obtain empirical evidence were
interviews (20%) and content analysis (9%), or a mix of both (10%). 37
The Quebec representative, chosen for its distinct higher education system characterized by low tuition fees
and a strong discourse favoring accessibility, did not respond to the requests; the Council of Ministers of
Education, which would have been interviewed to receive an overview over the positions of all provinces,
declined to participate, referring directly to the provinces.
70
Interviewees can be classified into two groups: Current public officials as well as
representatives of interest groups or think tanks, directly or indirectly involved in the post-
secondary education policy debates, on the one hand; and „knowledgeable observers‟, who
until recently have occupied senior positions in the public service or in interest groups
organizations and can provide detailed and unfiltered insights into the dynamics between and
within advocacy coalitions. Semi-directed interviews were chosen as the most appropriate
methodology not only because they provide for pertinent data to deduct the beliefs and values
of the advocacy coalitions, but because they also allow collecting information about the
coordination between coalition members. This is an aspect to which, as discussed in the
previous chapter, should be paid more attention to. To complement the interviews, the second
data consists of key documents used or referred to by the actors or the scientific literature.
This includes reports, policy proposals or briefing notes, which are all publicly available.
Finally, in order to compare the main elements in the discourse between the various advocacy
coalitions, the third set of data refers to the presentations of two organisations representing the
two advocacy coalitions, the AUCC and the CAUT, since 1997. This is when the Chretien
government launched the so-called “Education Opportunities” budget and the federal budgets
began to include “additional, sometimes substantial resources for higher education and
training” (Colin and Kerr, 2006).
A content analysis was conducted to study these data sets. Content analysis is based on the
premise that symbolic data of human action, such as newspapers, speeches or drawings,
constitute an integral part of the social world, and not a mere reflection of it (Sabourin, 2009).
The analysis is made on the level of themes and the coding framework is based upon the tri-
partite belief system of the ACF, more specifically the table proposed by Sabatier and
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Jenkins-Smith (1993). This table (see table 4) lists the so-called illustrative components of
each belief level, thereby providing the researcher with a broad grid to identify values and
beliefs of each advocacy coalition. According to Sabatier and Weible (2007), it is sufficient to
operationalize two to three components to make out the coalitions.
Table 4: Illustrative components of the belief systems (Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith, 1993).38
Deep Core Policy Core Secondary Aspects
Defining characteristics
Fundamental normative and ontological axioms
Fundamental policy positions concerning the basic strategies for achieving core values within subsystem
Instrumental decisions and information searches necessary to implement policy core
Scope / Across all policy subsystems Subsystem wide Usually only part of subsystem
Susceptibility to change
Very difficult; akin to a religious conversion
Difficult, but can occur if experience reveals serious anomalies
Moderately easy; this is the topic of most administrative and even legislative policymaking
Illustrative components
1. Human nature, i.e. Inherently evil vs. socially redeemable
2. Relative priority of various ultimate values: Freedom, security, power, knowledge, health, etc.
3. Basic criteria of distributive justice (Whose welfare counts?)
Socio-cultural identity (e.g. ethnicity, religion, gender, profession)
1. Fundamental normative precepts:
- Orientation on basic value priorities
- Identification of groups or other entities whose welfare is of greatest concern
2. Precepts with a
substantial empirical component:
- Overall seriousness of the problem
- Basic causes of the problem
- Proper distribution of authority between government and market
- Proper distribution of authority among levels of government
- Priority accorded various policy instruments
- Participation of public vs. experts vs. elected officials
- Etc.
1. Seriousness of specific aspects of the problem in specific locales
2. Importance of various causal linkages in different locales and over time
3. Most decisions concerning administrative rules, budgetary allocations, disposition of cases, statutory interpretation, and even statutory revision
4. Information regarding performance of specific programs or institutions.
38
Components marked in bold are used for the subsequent analysis.
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4.2. Limitations, clarifications and ethics
In our view, there are three relevant limitations to this research project. The first limitation
pertains to the high degree of decentralization of the Canadian post-secondary education
system and, therefore, the high number of institutions, organization and governments
involved. Consequently, there is a considerable degree of generalization in the analysis, given
that only nineteen individuals were interviewed. Second, in an ideal setting, the ACF requires
the researcher to study the belief system for a time period of a decade or longer. However, it
was beyond the scope of this research project to undertake a full analysis of the discourse
involving all actors over the length of a decade. Nonetheless, the presentations of the two
main actors, the AUCC and the CAUT, during the pre-budgetary consultations from 1997-
2009 provide some indication as to whether there have been significant changes in the actor‟s
positions or communication strategies. From a theoretical standpoint, in fact, we may also
assume that the actors‟ belief systems have not undergone significant alterations since 1997,
given that major policy change has not occurred ever since. Third, the empirical evidence
with respect to the provinces is very limited, as only two representatives agreed to participate,
while in the two other cases, the contacted persons declined or did not respond to the request.
Thus, for a comprehensive understanding, further research into the various provincial
positions and belief systems would be required.
Moreover, two clarifications need to be made. First, the theoretical approach is inspired by the
Advocacy Coalition Framework, but not a full application of it. Second, in the course of the
interviews, at least one participant has expressed concerns that the research is biased because
the research question would imply that there should be a national strategy. Clearly, this is not
the starting point and there is no underlying assumption that a national or centralized strategy
73
would be the best policy option. It must be stressed once again that the points of departure for
this research project are twofold. First, the literature review and the policy proposals of
various stakeholder groups have stressed for several years, if not decades, the need for more
federal and provincial collaboration. Second, the comparative perspective has illustrated the
trend in other federalist countries to clarify roles between different levels of government and
to agree on a set of common objectives. On the basis of these two observations, we have
formulated the research question which aims to understand and explain a social phenomenon,
rather than trying to prove the necessity to institute a national strategy.
All precautionary measures have been taken in accordance with the requirements of the Ethics
Commission of the University of Ottawa to mitigate potential ethical issues that may have
arisen in this research paper. The measures taken have been met with approval by the Ethics
Commission. More specifically, all interviews have been conducted anonymously.
Participants have agreed to be referred to as representatives of the institution in question. All
interviews have been conducted either in the participant‟s office or by telephone. In one
exception, the respondent answered the questions in writing. The recordings of the interviews
will be stored for five years according to the requirements of the Ethics Commission.
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5. ANALYSIS
On the background of the theoretical discussions about the ACF, this chapter will provide an
analysis of the policy subsystem pertaining to Canada‟s post-secondary education sector with
a particular focus on the role of the federal government. The analysis will take a look at the
main elements of the policy subsystem, that is, the belief system (5.1.) and the degree of
coordination between advocacy coalition members (5.2.). Furthermore, an overview, albeit
not exhaustive, of the advocacy coalitions‟ key resources and their strategies will be offered in
subchapter 5.3.
To begin with, table 5 presents the three proposed advocacy coalitions. They are named
according to what we believe summarizes best their driving beliefs, that is, the Equal
Opportunity Coalition, the Economic Efficiency Coalition and the Provincial Responsibility
Coalition. The organizations listed in normal font have been interviewed, whereas those in
italics have not. Latter‟s categorization is based on limited empirical evidence and is therefore
only approximate.39
The attentive reader will notice that there are no federal government
departments or agencies, including national research granting councils, listed in any of the
advocacy coalitions. Although the ACF considers government departments as possible
advocacy coalition members, it also notes that not everybody has to belong to an advocacy
coalition. This is particularly true for bureaucrats who, at least in their public discourse, adopt
a neutral position (Sabatier, 1993). The interviews with several former and current
representatives of federal agencies40
have led us to conclude that, while there might be
39
With regards to the EO Coalition, the approximate categorization is based on information provided by interview participants about the public endorsements they have received. With regards to the PSE Strategy, the CCL lists the letters of support for the 2007 annual report it has received (see http://www.ccl-cca.ca/CCL/Reports/PostSecondaryEducation/Archives2007/PSE2007support.html , accessed on 25 June 2011). 40
Interview requests with other federal agencies or departments were not answered or rejected.
75
underlying tendencies towards one coalition or another, there is not enough evidence to arrive
at a definite conclusion. As well, federal departments or agencies have largely abstained from
commenting on the policy proposals in question.
Table 5: Overview of advocacy coalitions
Equal Opportunity (EO)
Coalition
Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT),
Canadian Federation of Students (CFS), Humanities and
Social Sciences Federation of Canada (CanFed), New
Democratic Party (NDP)
(Canadian Labour Congress, Fédération québécoise des
professeures et professeurs d‘université (FQPPU), and other
provincial labour unions)
Economic Efficiency (EE)
Coalition
Association of Universities and Colleges Canada (AUCC),
G5, G13 (U15)41
universities, Canadian Alliance of Student
Associations, Canadian Council on Learning, Conference
Board of Canada, Public Policy Forum, Higher Education
Quality Council of Ontario
(Most small- and mid-sized universities, Association of
Canadian Community Colleges, and other economic and trade
promoting associations)
Provincial Responsibility
(PR) Coalition 42
Québec, Alberta, Ontario, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick
(British Columbia, Council of Minister of Education Canada
CMEC, Quebec universities and associations, including
student groups)
41
G13 are the 13 most research intensive universities, whereas the U15 are the 15 largest research universities adding the University of Manitoba and the University of Saskatchewan to the G13. 42
Although no interviews were conducted with officials from Alberta and Quebec, the information collected from the press review and the interviews with other provincial representatives provides enough evidence to categorize them clearly as belonging to this advocacy coalition.
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5.1. The belief system
5.1.1. Deep Core beliefs: Equal opportunities vs. economic efficiency
The scope of deep core belief extends beyond a specific policy area and determines an actor‟s
general approach to policy. One way to identify these basic beliefs is by establishing the
relative priority of ultimate values such as freedom, power or security, for instance43
. As in
many other policy areas, the current post-secondary education debate in Canada is structured
along the economic efficiency versus the equal opportunity spectrum. While all actors
recognize that efficiency and equal opportunity are important elements of Canada‟s university
sector, they prioritize them differently. These philosophically divergent approaches can best
be illustrated against the backdrop of the accessibility/inclusiveness versus quality/excellence
debate.44
The relative priority accorded to one or the other not only structures the relations between the
three advocacy coalitions, but also between its members. The most homogenous coalition in
this respect is the EO Coalition. Even though the need for efficiency is not entirely rejected,
the focus of their advocacy activities resides in the notion of ensuring equal opportunities.
Accordingly, all qualified students from all over Canada should be able to receive the same
high quality education regardless of their socio-economic background, or whether they go to a
small town university in a rural area or a large research university in a metropolitan region.
The EO coalition tends to see accessibility and quality as largely compatible, given that there
is enough public funding. Bob Rae (Rae, 2005: p. 21 – 22), a former NDP premier of Ontario
and author of the report Ontario – A leader in learning has summarized this view as follows:
43
See Table 4. 44
See CMEC’s (1999) study on the commonly agreed core principles of Canada’s post-secondary education.
77
―Some will argue that quality and high standards are incompatible with the
desire to make education more accessible. Others may contend that the central
goal of social inclusiveness should trump ‗elitist‘ concerns about excellence,
that Canada can afford a pretty good system, but not one that achieves
greatness. Each of these views is wrong. We need governments and institutions
that are irrevocably committed to access for every Canadian who is qualified
to attend.‖
Indeed, several actors of the EE coalition have raised concerns about the growing tension
between providing high quality education and keeping the system inclusive and accessible at
the same time. The perceived growing incompatibility between high quality education and
wide accessibility is based on the view that public funding is and will remain scarce. In an
environment of budgetary constraints and global competition, efficiency and excellence
become the driving values. In contrast, policies seeking to impose equal opportunities are seen
to achieve the very opposite, as the former President of the University of Toronto, Robert
Prichard (2000: p. 33) asserted:
―For too long Canada, in the name of equal opportunity, has had policies
unduly favouring homogeneity, not differentiation, with the perverse result of
limiting, not expanding student opportunity‖.
He further argues (p. 36):
―This resistance to competition and preference for regulation is ill-placed in
the growing global competition for intellectual talent. (...) Arbitrary limits and
regulations, adopted in the name of avoiding the alleged destructive aspects of
competition (e.g. eliminating the losers in a process for which winners and
losers are inherent) will do nothing but constrain our effectiveness and
undermine our commitment to performance and excellence.‖
His view is shared by Indira Samarasekera, President of the University of Alberta:
―Canada maybe is beginning to recognize the need for differentiation. The
view that everybody needs to be equal — in resources, in academic mission,
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in mandate — puts fewer noses out of joint. But the reality is, that doesn‘t
produce the winners.‖45
Thus, in this view, competition is inevitable and should be embraced. In order to be able to
compete on a global scale, though, differentiation based on excellence is necessary. However,
there is disagreement within the EE Coalition as to whether competition on a national level
brings enough differentiation to compete on a global scale, or whether additional measures are
required. While the G5 universities propose sort of a Canadian version of the German
Excellence initiative, which singles out a small number of major research universities to
receive additional resources for research in order to compete globally, the great majority of
this advocacy coalition does not support such an approach. Carleton University President
Roseann O‟Reilly Runte argued: “If you say to the small institutions, „you can‟t compete,‟
then they‟ll just fold their tents,” she says. “And if you say to the large institutions, „You‟ve
got it, you don‟t have to compete,‟ they‟ll be complacent.”46
Hence, in this view, competition
will automatically result in greater differentiation, which from a macro-perspective will lead
to more efficiency. More efficiency will eventually offer more opportunities to students and
academics.
As for the PR Coalition, the interviews have not provided enough evidence to make any
conclusive statements. Generally, though, the literature review suggests that higher education
policies in the last fifteen years have definitely stressed the need for more efficiency and
competition. For example, most provinces have put a price on education by deregulating
tuition fees and want to move towards a more differentiated and integrated post-secondary
education system. Quebec, on the contrary, has largely resisted these trends. As noted by
45
Wells P., “Our universities can be smarter”, MacLeans, 28 July 2009. 46
Campbell C., “Small but smart”, MacLeans, 4 September 2009.
79
several respondents, inclusiveness and accessibility continue to be considered, for now, as
non-negotiable core principles of its post-secondary education system. Yet, even the belle
province joins the other provinces in stressing the necessity to be competitive. This is
illustrated, for instance, by the fact that the motto of the post-secondary education summit
organized by the Council of the Federation in 2006, but initiated by the provincial leaders of
Quebec and Ontario, was: “Competing for tomorrow”.
In conclusion, it shall be stressed that in the economic efficiency versus equal opportunity
debate, the advocacy coalitions do not opt for one or the other, but they prioritize them
differently. Hence, the CAUT states on its website: “CAUT recognizes the important
economic contributions that universities and colleges make, but believes that economic and
commercial considerations should not drive government policy and institutional decision-
making”47
. Nonetheless, this antagonism is not only a central element in defining the deep
core beliefs. As we shall illustrate in the following sub-chapters, this divergence on
fundamental beliefs is reflected in various shades and forms on the level of policy core and
secondary beliefs.
5.1.2. Policy core beliefs
According to Sabatier (2007), at least two to three policy core beliefs must be operationalised
in order to identify advocacy coalitions. For our purposes, the following illustrative
components are the most relevant: a) The perception of basic problems and challenges in
47
CAUT, Policy statement on post-secondary education and research, November 2009: http://www.caut.ca/pages.asp?page=287&lang=1 (accessed on July 28, 2011).
80
postsecondary education; b) the proper distribution of authority among levels of government;
and c) the priority accorded to various policy instruments.
a) Problems and challenges
According to Hall (1993) and Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith (1993), an important element in
studying the policy process is to inquire into how actors assess the seriousness of an issue and
frame the challenges, which, again, reflects their values and beliefs. From the perspective of
the EO Coalition, the main issues are primarily related to the reduction of public funding in
recent decades.
„The future of post-secondary in Canada is at a crossroads. After years of public
funding cuts, the quality and accessibility of universities and colleges are at risk.
Skyrocketing tuition fees, fewer faculty, larger classes, few course offerings,
reduced library holding, and the commercialization of research are all
symptomatic of the continuing and chronic public under-funding of post-secondary
education.‖ (CAUT, 2007)
The lack of public funding refers more precisely to the insufficient public support for the
universities‟ core funding, also referred to as the operational budget. The shift towards
targeted and private funding is perceived to be the start of a wide array of problems that put in
peril the key principles of Canada‟s post-secondary education sector. It is argued that in order
to compensate for the lack of core funding, tuition fees had to be deregulated, which made the
system less inclusive, less accessible and, thus, less equal. Especially for the CFS, high tuition
fees and debt levels remain the number one problem. Furthermore, it is pointed out that
operational budgets have been strained even more due to the indirect costs caused by the
influx of federal money for research. This has also negatively affected the quality of the
education mission. Finally, the targeted nature of the research grants and the promotion of
greater commercialization of research are seen as an infringement on the autonomy of
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institutions and researchers as well as on the pursuit of basic research. In sum, the challenges
identified by the EO Coalition are characterized by concerns over the altered role of the state
in post-secondary education, a role that is inspired by neo-liberalism and which has a drastic
impact on the core principles of the Canadian university system. Generally, these challenges
are framed mostly in a domestic context, emphasizing the importance of education for social
cohesion and progress.
This contrasts with the EE Coalition‟s view that the most urgent issues Canada is facing are
related to globalization, as illustrated by this statement of a G-13 university president.
“We are competing with universities from all over the world for talents in
students and faculty, for research money, for leadership in research, for
membership in research networks. So, instead of concerning ourselves with
parochial, political issues in the provinces, maybe we should raise our gaze up
to the horizon, and see what is going on out there. And when we do that, we
will see that we are ill equipped to compete. We have a patchwork of
perfusion. Different levels of funding, different control mechanisms, different
expectations on the part of the provinces, lack of focus and alignment of areas
of specialization and expertise (…) We risk losing out in the global race.‖
The discourse of global competition has been present throughout the last decade (see, for
example, also Prichard, 2000). In the late 1990s, “brain drain” was the buzzword that shaped
the agenda of the EE Coalition. Even though the EO coalition occasionally makes reference to
the globalized environment and the importance of international education, it has been a much
less important element in their discourse. In some cases, the issue of global competition was
put into question. For instance, at the height of the brain drain debate in 1999, the then-
President of the CAUT, Bill Graham, asserted that “there is little indication that there‟s a
brain drain”48
. It remains, nevertheless, that the EE Coalition sees the only way to compete in
a global economy by nurturing the knowledge-based economy. According to this view,
48
Pre-Budget Consultations, 4 November 1999.
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universities must produce highly skilled labour in line with labour market demand, as well as
economically and socially relevant knowledge. Thus, the main focus of public policies should
consist of supporting university in meeting these demands. In this respect, the fragmented
nature of Canada‟s post-secondary education landscape creates barriers for universities to
compete on a global level, even though for several respondents, the situation is “not terrible”,
but only suboptimal. Yet, the absence of a „Masterplan‟ and the tendency to think of higher
education only in a domestic or provincial frame, as another participant remarked, makes it
difficult to tackle broader, yet critical issues such as demographic pressures and labour market
needs in a comprehensive manner. Moreover, one of the key issues, raised by many in this
advocacy coalition, is the lack of comparable and complete data. How can policy makers
design policies that address the needs of the economy and the society if they don‟t have
sufficient information? Especially the CCL (2007) has been vocal on this aspect, but also
organizations such as CASA and HECQO have pointed to this problem.
As for the PR Coalition , the Council of the Federation‟s (COF) “Competing for Tomorrow –
A strategy for Postsecondary Education and Skills Training in Canada” (COF, 2006) states
that improving “postsecondary education and skills training in Canada is driven by both
global competition and local challenges”. In the interview process, though, the provincial
participants have identified solely local challenges and have stressed that they differ from
province to province. The primary concerns of the representative for Ontario are the
management of the dramatic growth in the number of students, which is driven by a financing
formula that favours enrolment. The financing scheme of the university system has also
become a key issue because of the change in accountability requirements, which the
universities oppose. The representative for Nova Scotia highlighted the unique features of the
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post-secondary education system, such as the high number of universities per capita and the
high participation rate and low tax base, which results in high recruitment costs and student
debts as well as an aging infrastructure. Adding to the difficulty of adequately funding Nova
Scotia‟s postsecondary education system is the design of the Canada Social Transfer, which
puts the province at a disadvantage because the amount is calculated on a per capita instead of
a per student basis.
One concern that all advocacy coalitions share, albeit to different degrees, is the state of
federal-provincial relations in post-secondary education. Most participants agreed with the
statement that there is a lack of coordination between the two levels of government, though
for different reasons. Representatives of the EO Coalition deplored the „decentralized‟ and
„opaque nature‟ in which post-secondary policy is made. For the EE Coalition, the
fragmentation is inefficient in terms of allocation of resources as well as policy design.
Finally, the criticism of provincial officials pertains primarily to federal investments in
university research, which, they feel, occurs with little or no consultation of the provinces.
This then brings us to the key question: Which role should the federal government play in
Canada‟s post-secondary education sector?
b) “Spread the love” vs. “give us the money”: Defining the appropriate role of the federal
government
Defining the role of the federal government in post-secondary education is at the core of the
debate over the relevance of a national strategy. One interviewee argued that it is easier to
define what its role is not, than what it is. Notwithstanding the many distinct views of
individuals and organizations on this almost epic debate, three patterns can be distinguished.
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The EO coalition sees post-secondary education as a shared jurisdiction. All representatives
recognize that education lies within the constitutional responsibility of the provinces.
However, the federal government has the constitutional right and duty to ensure that all
Canadians have equal access to post-secondary education and skills training. Thus, as one
interviewee put it, the main role of the Canadian government is to “spread the love”. Akin to
its role in health care, the Canadian government should lead the process of defining and
establishing nationwide principles and standards, which would ensure that all Canadians have
the opportunity to access the same high-quality education across the country.
As for the EE Coalition, their main concern is that the federal government must assume a
leadership role in those areas in which its responsibilities have generally been accepted. This
includes the realm of research (including covering indirect costs), international education,
infrastructure, aboriginal post-secondary education and the support of students in need
through the Canada Student Loan Program. As discussed, while the G5 universities went as
far as suggesting that the federal government‟s role encompasses the designation of a small
number of universities as global flagship institutions, the vast majority of universities oppose
any direct federal intrusion imposing a differentiated post-secondary education sector. In
contrast, in the same vein of strengthening the international competitiveness, there is general
consensus at latest since the two national conferences in 2005 and 2006, the Canadian
government must assume a leadership role in this field, by providing scholarship and
promoting Canada‟s universities abroad. Finally, think tanks, such as the CCL, furthermore
see the collection and distribution of data and information as one possible area in which
national departments or agencies could (or should) play an important role.
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The PR Coalition understands post-secondary education clearly as an exclusive provincial
responsibility. The role of the federal government is to provide the provinces with the
financial means to “make sure that provinces have the ability to do it the way they want” and
“to help them fix problems”. One provincial representative bluntly put it: “Give us the money,
we‟ll take care of the rest”. In research, for example, federal support is considered intrusive
insofar as it may have negative repercussions on the educational mission of universities and
impact provincial budgets by imposing matching fund schemes. Nonetheless, federal
involvement in research is generally accepted. In international education, Quebec‟s “Conseil
supérieur de l‟éducation” (Quebec, 2005) notes that the objectives of both levels of
government with regards to the internationalization of Quebec‟s universities have converged
in recent years. In British Columbia, the “Campus 2020” (Plant, 2007) report recommends
that the provincial government collaborate more closely with the federal government with
regards to infrastructure projects and immigration matters. In short, federal agencies and
departments may play an important role in commonly agreed areas insofar as they address the
specific needs of provinces and support their priorities.
The National Dialogue on Higher Education Conference in 2005 (CanFed, 2005) concluded
that federal and provincial policy makers as well as stakeholders recognized that both levels
of government assume “mutually valuable roles” in post-secondary education, though further
discussion was needed, especially on ways to promote “collaborative, cooperative and
constructive federalism” (p. 13). This brings us to the advocacy coalitions‟ positions on
appropriate policy instruments for developing a pan-Canadian approach to post-secondary
education.
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c) Policy instruments: incentives, punishment or neither of both
Lascoumes and Le Gales (2007: p. 4) define a public policy instrument as a “device that is
both technical and social, that organizes specific relations between the state and those it is
addressed to, according to the representations and meanings it carries”. The authors note that
these instruments are in themselves not neutral. Rather, they carry and reflect a specific set of
values as to how the relation between the state and its subjects is to be governed. The authors
distinguish basically three types of instruments: the legislative and regulatory, the economic
and fiscal and the „new public policy instruments‟, including agreement- and information-
based instruments as well as de facto standards and best practices.
As we have alluded to in the first part of this paper, the actions and public policies of the
federal government addressed at universities are primarily of an economic and fiscal nature.
Since 1997, the creation of new powerful funding institutions and programs has created
financial incentives that have directed the behaviour of researchers and universities, aligning
them with the priorities of the federal government of the day. In line with Lascoumes and Le
Gales‟ (2007) depiction of financial and economic instruments, these federal programs have a
constitutional basis (the spending power prerogative) and draw their legitimacy from the
social and economic benefits they are deemed to create for the community and the society at
large.
For the EO Coalition, the incentives created through those financial instruments have
sometimes perverse effects. The representative of the CAUT recalls a discussion with a
provincial minister during which the latter supposedly said: “You must understand, there is a
built-in incentive for us to increase fees. This is a way to leverage more money, because the
87
federal government will have to increase student loans”. Therefore, the EO coalition
advocates a legislative instrument to clarify the federal-provincial relationship. The proposed
Canada Post-Secondary Education Act put forward by the CAUT and endorsed by the NDP,
seeks to regulate the cash transfers of the federal government to the provinces. On the one
hand, it aims to create long-term stability and predictability with regards to federal transfer
payments. On the other hand, its purpose is to improve the accountability of provinces and to
guarantee the establishment and the respect of basic principles such as quality, accessibility
and public governance of universities across the country. To this end, akin to the Canada
Health Act, provinces are required to ensure that certain standards are met in order to receive
funding. There are several noteworthy features of this policy instrument. First, the EO
coalition believes that a certain degree of coercion is needed to foster closer federal-provincial
cooperation. Second, although provinces would be consulted at one time or another49
, the Act
draws its direct legitimacy from the federal parliament. Third, the Act provides the legal
framework for the federal government to use financial instruments in order to direct the
behaviour of the provinces. However, rather than creating positive incentives, the legislation
establishes a system in which non-complying provinces are punished by receiving reduced
cash transfers. Fourth, the Act includes a provision stating that the province of Quebec would
have the option to opt out of this arrangement, given its distinct approach to social policy and
the unresolved Quebec-Canada relationship.
The EE coalition supports the objective of the Canada Post-Secondary Education Act to
secure long-term funding, but does not consider legislation as the appropriate policy
49
If the Canada PSE Act is inserted as a Private Member’s Bill, the Member of Parliament or its party who put the proposal forward is not allowed to consult with the provinces prior to tabling the bill. If the act is sponsored by the government, prior consultations with the provinces are possible.
88
instrument. Some have expressed concerns that legislating post-secondary education matters
on the federal level would reopen constitutional debates, for which there is currently very
little appetite. This concern has also been shared by interview participants from the other two
coalitions. Moreover, a federal Act is seen as too “rigid” and not sensitive enough to local and
regional differences. For another interviewee, the Act tries to regulate too many aspects, such
as the public governance of universities, and is more idealistic than pragmatic. Most
importantly, however, the EE coalition rejects the idea of imposing sanctions on non-
complying provinces. Rather, its representatives have highlighted the need for a broad
consultation process with all involved stakeholders, including the business sector, on the basis
of comprehensive data and research. With regards to the decision-making process, a step-by-
step, incremental process is considered as the most pragmatic approach, as suggested for
example by the Canadian Council on Learning‟s report “Post-Secondary Education in Canada
– Strategies for Success” (CCL, 2007). A key element in this process is the production of
comprehensive data that would be widely distributed and discussed. Furthermore, against the
backdrop of the international trend towards constant monitoring and reporting of the
performance and progress in the post-secondary education sector, the CCL recommends
establishing benchmarking in a limited number of areas of strategic importance, such as R&D
personnel and graduation rates. In the end, referring again to Lascoumes and Le Gales‟ (2007)
typology of instruments, the EE coalition favours clearly the third category of policy
instrument, that is the new governance policy instruments, as they were used for example in
the Bologna process. These policy instruments rely on a new kind of legitimacy infused by its
inclusive and broad consultation process as well as the scientific metrics that allow for
89
performance- and goal-oriented policymaking. Proponents of this approach see the role of the
state as the facilitator and coordinator, rather than as a castigator.
With the exception of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, which have publicly endorsed CCL‟s
2007 annual report, most provinces have opposed or ignored it. In particular in Quebec, the
idea of a pan-Canadian strategy found little support: “L‟éducation est de compétence
provinciale et le restera. Alors aucun plan ou structure pancanadienne n‟est souhaitable”50
,
said a spokesperson for Quebec education minister Michelle Courchesne, and added: “On
travaille déjà en collaboration avec les autres provinces avec le CMEC sur certains enjeux
interprovinciaux. Cela suffit.” Unlike their federal counterparts, Quebec student groups have
also rejected the report stating that, while the report identifies the right challenges, the policy
solutions are misguided51
. The students association argues that the CCL‟s report implicitly
recommends the creation of a national ministry for education and, most of all, promotes
unhealthy competition. In general, the PR Coalition opposes any kind of policy framework or
legislation that would touch upon the realm of post-secondary education. For the
representative of the Ontario Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities, the question of
a national strategy or framework “is a debate that the federal government is having with
itself.” Those who share the same view also assert that these policy proposals mainly serve
the interests of those federal-level organizations which “would like to carve out a larger role
for themselves by implicating the government they are charged with lobbying more closely in
the field.”52
In summary, any of the three policy instruments discussed above are in principle
50
Ballivy V., “Une stratégie pancanadienne est réclamée”, La Presse, 12 December 2007, p. A20. 51
Idem. 52
Usher A., “CCL has been a dead man walking for year”, GlobeCampus Blog (The Globe and Mail), 15 January 2010, http://www.globecampus.ca/blogs/eye-higher-ed/2010/01/15/ccl-has-been-dead-man-walking-years/ (accessed on 21 June 2011).
90
rejected by the provinces by fear that they lead to centralisation in favour of the federal
government. Rather, based on the belief that the federal government plays the role of a
financial backup, coordination should occur on an ad-hoc basis and not be institutionalized.
Thus, consultation should occur prior to and throughout the establishment of new federal
programs for universities. The perception of how they should function belongs to the realm of
secondary beliefs, which will be discussed in the next section.
5.1.3. Secondary beliefs
Secondary beliefs are, as noted above, much more narrow in scope than the policy core beliefs
and refer primarily to technical and procedural questions at the program level. Consequently,
they are more likely to change over time even if the degree of policy change is usually much
less important. We shall thus take a brief look at three areas of federal support for post-
secondary education, that is student aid, federal transfers and research, in which some
programs have been the subject of continued criticism and, in some cases, have been modified
or even abolished as a consequence.
With respect to federal student aid, the program which perhaps sparked the strongest
controversies in the past decade was the Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation
(CMSF). Recognizing the provincial jurisdiction over education, Human Resources and Skills
Development Minister Pierre Pettigrew justified the program by asserting that access to
education demanded a federal role.53
From the perspective of the Provincial and the EO
53
Greenspon E., “Ottawa defends budget”, The Globe and Mail, 5 February 1998, p. A5.
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Coalitions, the program achieved the very opposite. The provinces, especially Quebec54
, saw
the program as a major intrusion of Ottawa into provincial jurisdiction since it established a
direct link between a federal agency and Canadian citizens in post-secondary education. For
the Canadian Federation of Students, the CMSF was “at best a public relations gimmick”
which had little or no impact on accessibility because CMSF scholarships simply replaced
provincial loan remissions.55
In contrast, the EE coalition showed far fewer concerns about
jurisdictional conflicts and saw the program as “a good thing”. Even smaller provinces, such
as Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, noted the positive working relationship with the CSMF
on research projects, which they could not have realized, given their limited policy research
capacities. In spite of this, the conservative government did not renew the CMSF (see Canada,
2008). Instead, it was integrated with the already existing Canada Student Grant Program.
This reversal of the federal government‟s approach to student support can be explained by the
Conservative party‟s own beliefs that the CMSF constituted an unacceptable intrusion and
unnecessary provocation of Quebec‟s separatists56
; a view, by the way, that was also shared
by some senior liberal Members of Parliament coming from Quebec, such as then
intergovernmental affairs minister Stéphane Dion.57
At the same time, the decision to abandon
the CMSF was supported by both, the PR and the EO Coalition, and was not fiercely opposed
by the EE Coalition, as everybody understood the negative impact of the program on
intergovernmental relations.
54
Quebec eventually opted out of the CSMF and received the equivalent sum to run its own scholarship program. 55
Canadian Federation of Students, Millennium Scholarship Foundation - A failed Experiment in Student Financial Aid, 2007, http://www.cfs-fcee.ca/html/english/research/factsheets/factsheet-msf.pdf (accessed on 23 June 2011). 56
McCarthy S., “Scholarships a PQ weapon, Conservative Senators warn”, The Globe and Mail, 16 June 1998, p. A11. 57
Yakabuski K., “King of the Hill”, The Globe and Mail, 20 January 2007, p. F4.
92
As for the federal transfers, the Liberals‟ concerns over missing accountability and visibility
continued far beyond the cuts in 1995. One participant recalled a discussion with then Finance
Minister Paul Martin whom he reported as saying: “Why would I put more money into a
transfer that is going to allow the government of Alberta to cut taxes and British Columbia to
build more roads?” A year after coming to power, the new Conservative government declared
in their budget their willingness to “clarify roles and responsibilities” and “restore the fiscal
balance” (Canada, 2007). For this purpose, an additional $800m for the Canada Social
Transfer and a yearly automatic increase of 3% were announced. Although the increased
transfers still came without any strings attached, the share designated for post-secondary
education was earmarked publicly at 25%. The EO coalition has regarded this as a major
success and the result of years-long advocacy work. The EE coalition has supported increased
transfers over the last decade as well. However, there is a sense that the transfers are not the
main issue any more and that the period of unconditional federal cash transfers is over. Thus,
the AUCC, for example, has instead shifted its advocacy focus towards the issue of indirect
costs.58
This approach has also less potential for conflict among its own membership. The
representative of the AUCC noted that university presidents have been divided over the
transfer issue. Smaller and mid-sized universities with limited research activity tend to believe
that the federal government must ensure that provinces do invest the designated money for
post-secondary education in universities, rather than in K-12 education, where its
responsibilities are undisputed. In contrast, Quebec universities support their provincial
58
For example, in the 1999 pre-budget consultations, AUCC President Robert Giroux stated in the hearing that “First and foremost, the federal government must restore transfers to the provinces for the support of post-secondary education”. Seven years later, the AUCC stopped advocating actively for an increase of transfer payments, and instead called for stronger federal support in covering indirect costs (see AUCC Pre-Budget Consultation statement, 27 September 2006). Furthermore, neither the CASA’s “Roadmap to a Pan-Canadian Accord” nor the CCL’s 2007 annual report make significant mention of the cash transfers.
93
government‟s view that Ottawa should have no say in post-secondary education matters and
simply increase transfers. Hence, the modifications of the CST followed a years-long debate
and a policy learning process that was favoured by the Conservative government‟s belief in
stronger decentralization of the federal government‟s role in post-secondary education.
With respect to programs supporting research university infrastructure, the government‟s
approach has, in principle, remained the same. The increased funding for research was
welcomed by all advocacy coalitions. Yet, the design and the implementation of the programs
are the subject of criticism by the PR Coalition and the EO Coalition. Regarding the program
design, the Ontario representative pointed to the fact that the provinces end up having to
subsidize federally funded research because the increasing indirect costs are covered by the
operating budget of the universities. For bigger provinces which have their own research and
innovation agendas, this seems even more frustrating as the federal research priorities are not
necessarily congruent with theirs. At no point have there been any federal-provincial
consultations on defining common priorities and objectives. In addition, smaller provinces
such as Nova Scotia see themselves disadvantaged by the design of the federally funded
research programs which tend to benefit provinces with strong knowledge-based industry
sectors, research-intensive universities and provincial administrations with substantial fiscal
capacities.59
According to a report by the Maritime Provinces Higher Education Commission
(MPHEC, 2000), those “design issues” have contributed to the Atlantic Provinces‟ declining
59
For example, the MPHEC (2000) notes that the Canada Foundation for Innovation’s (CFI) program design disadvantaged the Atlantic’s smaller universities because allocation was set according to a formula based on previous granting council successes. As well, the absence of matching funds constituted another disadvantage. According to the representative of the Nova Scotia Education ministry, because of the province’s inability to provide matching funds, some universities could not access CFI funds which led to some frustration among university executives.
94
share of national R&D expenditures.60
Hence, the CAUT asserts these targeted funding
programs have “not addressed the central problem”61
and, instead, have resulted in “less
accessibility and more regional inequalities”62
. Apart from the design issue, the Ontario
representative noted with respect to the most recent major federal initiative, the Knowledge
Infrastructure Program (KIP): “Although it may seem ungrateful to complain, the fact of the
matter is that the way in which it happened was very intrusive”. He referred in particular to
one case, in which the federal government had retroactively approved a proposal by a small
university in Ontario despite the prior rejection of the proposal by the provincial ministry. In
contrast, for Nova Scotia, which is familiar with major university infrastructure deferrals, the
KIP was a great help for the province, explained its representative. Generally, the EE coalition
has welcomed the federal government‟s research support initiatives.
5.1.4. Connecting the dots: An overview of the belief systems
An overview of the advocacy coalitions‟ belief systems illustrates that deep core, policy core
and secondary beliefs are closely interlinked. The fundamental values are reflected in various
shades and forms in the two lower belief categories. This is especially true for the supporters
of more intergovernmental coordination, that is, the EO and EE Coalition. Their respective
belief structure can be summarized as follows: According to the EO Coalition, public policies
with regards to post-secondary education must give priority to accessibility and providing
equal opportunities to all Canadians. For this advocacy coalition, which is closely associated
60
The Atlantic share of the national R&D expenditures declined mainly in the 1990s, from close to 6% in 1988 to 3.6% in 1996. There has been a further decline following the launch of the federal programs to 3.4% in 2003. The most recent statistics indicate that the share has risen again to 3.8% (see MPHEC, 2000; Statistics Canada, 2010). 61
See CAUT presentation at pre-budgetary consultations on 4 November 1999. 62
See CAUT presentation at pre-budgetary consultations 17 September 2003.
95
with the Labor Union and Social-Democrat movements, post-secondary education policy
should be at least as important as a tool of social policy as of economic policy. Therefore,
higher education policies must aim at both providing equal opportunities and offering
comprehensive and high quality education to everyone, everywhere. Governmental policies
towards universities should not be driven by economic considerations only and, hence, the
principle of independent scientific inquiry must be safeguarded. To this end, the role of the
state in the governance of the university sector is crucial. According to the EO Coalition‟s
view, the changing state-university relationship over the last decades, particularly with respect
to the financing of higher education institutions, is considered to be at the core of what its
proponents consider to be the main challenges. Alas, the „solution‟ rests with the state as well.
In terms of policy instruments, this translates into legislative and (preferably) coercive
measures. It reflects the belief that in spite of Canada‟s federalist system, the central
government is to play a leading role in assuring social equality and cohesiveness throughout
the country. Statements made, such as the one by an interviewee who suggested that Canada
has not had any visionary national projects since the time of former Prime Minister Pierre
Elliott Trudeau, imply the notion that higher education should become the new focal point of
a national identity-fostering Canadian welfare state. It this sense, the many references to the
Canada Health Act can also be related to a time period of a strong, socially progressive
federal government.
In contrast, the EE Coalition fundamentally believes that the pursuit of excellence,
particularly in research, is not compatible in a post-secondary education system that wants to
be equally inclusive. In fact, according to some of its members, policies that favor equal
treatment hinder the development of equal opportunities. In other words, the EE Coalition
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believes that only a differentiated university sector can adequately respond to the demands of
excellence in research on the one hand, and equal opportunities and accessibility on the other
hand. The EE Coalition‟s calls for a more efficient allocation of resources through a
differentiated post-secondary education system and better federal-provincial cooperation is
framed in the context of the global knowledge-based economy and the competition for talents.
The universities understand themselves as a central part of the national economy that seeks to
increase its productivity and competitiveness levels through knowledge and innovation.
Hence, the discourse of the EE Coalition is primarily driven by economic rationales. It thus
comes as no surprise that this advocacy coalition associates the main challenges of Canada‟s
university sector less with the altered role of the state, than with the global market forces. To
face these challenges, the state must not legislate and impose, but coordinate, inform and
provide the right financial incentives to produce „winners‟. In that sense, the various federal
programs launched since 1997 are regarded as highly beneficial. Yet, the efficiency of the
post-secondary education system is suboptimal in terms of meeting the demands of the
economy and of competing on a global level. Therefore, in the view of the EE Coalition,
closer federal-provincial collaboration with a more strategic focus is necessary. As well,
better data is considered important not only to design effective policies, but also to provide
universities with better information about the higher education market. Thus, to a significant
degree, the market is accepted as a regulating force. The primary role of the state is to support
the universities in their capacity to compete, whether on a local or global level.
With respect to the PR Coalition, the post-secondary education reforms of most provincial
governments in the last two decades have featured the introduction of market mechanisms and
stressed the need for differentiation and more responsiveness to the demands of the economy.
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Quebec is a notable exception insofar as inclusiveness and accessibility remain the ultimate
value. Thus, it is not the deep core beliefs which hold this advocacy coalition together, but
rather the policy core and secondary beliefs. The interviews suggest that the problems and
adequate solutions are primarily perceived in a provincial context, stressing that the
challenges differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Consequently, the PR Coalition believes
that the role of the federal government is to assist them in “fixing problems” by providing
adequate funds through unconditional transfer payments. The negative experience of reduced
transfer payments and the unilaterally established programs by the federal government in the
mid-1990s have considerably impacted the perception, especially of the larger provinces, that
a fruitful and equal collaboration with the federal government is not possible. As mentioned
though, poorer provinces such as Nova Scotia and Manitoba have been more flexible and
have publicly endorsed the CCL‟s suggestion for a pan-Canadian strategy.63
It remains that
with regards to their positions on the federal programs, for example in support of university
research, provinces are united in their perception that their design does not reflect provincial
priorities and specific circumstances. Hence, their secondary beliefs have reinforced their
policy core beliefs that an even stronger role of the federal government (which is assumed to
be inevitable in the case of a pan-Canadian post-secondary education strategy) would not be
in the interest of the provinces. As we shall see in the next chapter, the provinces have been
very successful in organizing themselves to defend this position.
63
See chapter 5.3. for further explanation.
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Table 6: Overview of the belief system on post-secondary education in Canada
Deep core beliefs Policy core beliefs Secondary beliefs
EO coalition PSE system must foremost be
inclusive and provide equal
opportunities to all Canadians
Equality and Quality are compatible
Problems and Challenges
- Erosion of public core funding for
universities threatens accessibility,
independent scientific inquiry, basic
research and quality of education.
- Primarily of domestic nature
Role of federal government
- PSE is a shared jurisdiction
- Ensure equal access and quality
education throughout the country
Policy instrument
- Legislative
Student aid
- CMSP was intrusive and did not
significantly improve accessibility
Federal transfers
- Separate PSE transfer with conditions
necessary
Research
- Important contributions to strengthen
research capacity of universities, but:
- Targeted funding threatens independent
scientific inquiry
- Funding programs towards
commercialization may infringe principle
academic autonomy
- Federal „boutique‟ programs may enhance
inequality between provinces and
institutions
EE Coalition Efficient allocation of resources
through a differentiated PSE system
necessary for excellence in research
and high quality teaching
Equal treatment hinders equal
opportunities
Problems and Challenges
- Global competition for talents
- Nurturing the knowledge-based
economy by responding to labour
market needs and innovation-focused
research
- Lack of data to design effective public
policies
Role of federal government
- Support universities through funding for
research (incl. indirect costs),
infrastructure, international and
aboriginal education.
- Coordinating production of data and
PSE research
Policy instrument
- Financial incentives and new
governance instruments (no coercion)
Student aid
- CMSP fulfilled its purpose.
Federal transfers
- Increased transfers are welcome, but:
- Belief that they are not sustainable.
Research
- Important contributions to strengthen
research capacity of universities
- Indirect costs must be fully covered by
federal government
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PR Coalition
Generally64, provincial policies stress
the need for differentiation and more
responsiveness of the universities to
labour market needs
Quebec: Inclusiveness and
accessibility of PSE system is a
priority
Problems and Challenges
- In each province different
- ON: strong student enrolment, financing
schemes for universities
- NS: old infrastructure, high student
debts
- Mostly, problems are seen on a
provincial level.
Role of federal government
- Fix problems
- Support core funding of universities
- Tolerated fields of action are research,
infrastructure, international education
and aboriginal education
Policy instrument
- Unconditional transfers
Student aid
- CMSP was intrusive and did not
significantly improve accessibility
Federal transfers
- Should be increased to pre-1993 level
Research
- Important contributions to strengthen
research capacity of universities, but:
- Federal government should cover indirect
costs
- Fed. Government should consult with
provinces on research priorities and agenda
- Fed. Research programs should take into
account particular situation of smaller
provinces.
64
Empirical evidence not sufficient to make conclusive statement, which is based on information from the interviews, as well as the literature review (in particular, Jones
(2007).
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5.2. Advocacy coalition coordination and interdependencies
Recent literature on advocacy coalitions has stressed the need to go beyond identifying belief
structures and to pay more attention to the degree of coordination. This coordination can be
informal or institutionalized and depends on the degree of functional interdependency
between the coalition members defined by the congruency of the belief systems and the extent
of the functional overlap. In other words, the more advocacy coalition members share the
same beliefs, and the more the actions of one advocacy coalition member furthers the goals of
another member, the stronger the coordination (see Fenger and Klok, 2001).
Although there are no formalized or institutionalized forms of collaboration, there is
nevertheless a significant degree of cooperation in the EO Coalition. This can be explained in
terms of a relatively high degree of interdependency. On the one hand, members share largely
the same values and worldviews. On the other hand, their relations are symbiotic as there is
no competition between them since they operate in different policy arenas or serve different
constituencies. Moreover, the NDP representative noted that there is a regular exchange of
people and ideas between the party and the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS). As well,
Bill C-398 was a direct consequence of the close relationship between the NDP and the
CAUT.
There is also a relatively high degree of coordination in the PR Coalition with regards to their
stance on the federal role in post-secondary education. The coordination among provinces has
even increased in the last decade when the Council of the Federation - under the leadership of
Quebec‟s Jean Charest - was founded in 2003. It gathers the Premiers of all provinces and
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territories twice a year65
with the goal “to play a leadership role in revitalizing the Canadian
federation and building a more constructive and cooperative federal system” (Council of the
Federation, 2003). Yet, as Rocher (2009: p. 107) notes, the Council was created in the first
place to actively counter the federal intrusion into provincial jurisdictions, based “on a
strongly negative perception of how the Canadian federal system has evolved over the course
of the past three decades”. Post-secondary education was on top of the Council‟s agenda in
2005 and 2006, when it was identified at the Banff meeting as one of the key issues. A few
months later, the summit on post-secondary education and skills training, hosted by the
premiers of Quebec and Ontario, took place in Ottawa; this meeting, however, excluded the
federal government though. Further interprovincial collaboration in post-secondary affairs
occurs within the Council of Ministers of Education Canada (CMEC), which was, similar to
the Council of the Federation, originally created to defend itself against federal intrusions
(Cameron, 2005). While the Council of the Federation gathers provincial leaders on the
highest levels and is therefore more political in nature, CMEC is a forum to discuss policy
issues, consult and cooperate on specific projects of mutual interest.66
Almost since its first
days, CMEC has been regularly subject to debate regarding its potential to be a truly pan-
Canadian, if not national, focal point for post-secondary education. To date, however, CMEC
has not been able to play this role; the statements by the provincial interviewees concede that
CMEC is “ineffective and unwilling to take positions”. According to interviewees, this is also
because the provinces send mostly low-level officials to the meetings, and thus do not
attribute to CMEC the significant role it could play. When interviewed for a 2002 review
65
Prior to the foundation of the Council, Premiers met once a year at the Annual Premier’s Conference. In contrast to its preceding institution, the Council is a more formalized and has a permanent secretariat (see McMenemy, 2006). 66
See www.cmec.ca (accessed on 30 March 2010).
102
report, CMEC‟s own secretariat staff emphasized “the need for provinces to rise above
individual jurisdictional concerns in the pursuit of common objectives” (CMEC, 2002: p. 14).
The provinces that are considered to dominate the agenda-setting and to have the most weight
in both bodies, the CoF and the CMEC, are Quebec, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia.
According to a former senior government official, Quebec and Alberta were not only the most
fervent defenders of provincial supremacy in post-secondary education, but they also
appeared to have closely coordinated their positions. In short, the interprovincial coordination
is mostly institutionalized and characterized by the very influential positions of the larger
provinces, which leverage these same interprovincial institutions for their own purposes.
Hence, among the provincial heavy weights, there is a high degree of belief congruence and
their relations are symbiotic since they share the same objective, which is to oppose federal
involvement in post-secondary education.
As for the EE Coalition, the degree of coordination is much more scattered and, therefore,
much less important. There are several coordinating groups within the advocacy coalitions.
On a national level, universities collaborate and coordinate their activities through the AUCC,
for example in the field of student mobility and institutional accreditation. In addition, G5 and
G13 universities collaborate particularly closely on the research front, with much success.
Think tanks, such as Conference Board of Canada or the Canadian Council on Learning, act
largely independently, though the latter has been cooperating regularly with smaller provinces
such as Nova Scotia on specific research projects. Coordination may also happen indirectly
and informally. For example, both the Conference Board of Canada and the Public Policy
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Forum have at least one G5 University President on their Boards of Directors67
. Thus, the low
degree of coordination in the EE coalition can also be explained in terms of its
interdependency structure. The relations between the EE Coalitions members are not always
symbiotic and can be indifferent or in some cases even competitive. For example, Canada‟s
largest research universities cooperate to advocate for more federal money, but at the same
time they compete on a daily basis for the highest share of this funding pie. Also, smaller
universities compete each semester for students and faculty. Finally, the belief system is more
heterogeneous and, therefore, not as congruent compared to the other two advocacy
coalitions. Nonetheless, the AUCC, which represents 95 member institutions with sometimes
diverging interests, is considered by many as the most successful organization in lobbying the
federal government in the last fifteen years. As explained in the next chapter, this is a result of
its contact networks and strategies.
5.3. Resources and strategies
Although the direction in which advocacy coalitions seek to move government programs are
strongly influenced by the belief systems, their capacity to do so depends on their resources
(Sabatier, 1999). Resources encompass legal authority, public opinion, information,
mobilizable troops, financial resources and skilful leadership (Sabatier, 2007). Though it is
beyond the scope of this research paper to provide a full analysis of the resources available to
67
Indira Samarasekera, President of the University of Alberta, is on the Boards of both organizations; Stephen Toope, President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of British Columbia, is on the Board of the Conference Board of Canada.
104
each advocacy coalition68
, we can, on the basis of the interviews, outline the types of
resources mobilized within a broad strategy to advance their position in the policy subsystem.
The success of major universities in lobbying for more research grants, which led in 1997-
1998 to the so-called paradigm change in federal support for universities, goes back to the
coordinated actions of a very small group of G5 university executives and the former AUCC
President, Robert Giroux, who had a direct and close relationship with the then-Clerk of the
Privy Council Kevin Lynch, a key figure within the administration. The former UBC
President Martha Piper summarized the approach as follows: “What you need to do is you
need to listen to government, listen to their concerns and then try to figure out how you can
help them solve their concerns.”69
Hence, the strategy of the AUCC consists in collaborating
with the federal government. One former senior government official explained that there is a
relatively strong interdependence, as the AUCC wants to be heard by the government which
in return wants the support of the universities for its S&T agenda. For this reason, AUCC
recruited senior government officials into its ranks who brought to the table not only insights
into how the federal government works but, more importantly, the right contact networks.
They AUCC‟s success therefore is based on skilful leadership and an important tight network
with key decision-makers. Other EE coalition members, however, lost considerable resources.
For instance, CCL‟s budget was completely cut by the federal government as of 2011. As a
consequence, the organization will have to continue with 5% of its original budget.
As for the EO Coalition, the current CAUT leadership and the CFS have adopted a more
confrontational approach towards the federal government, which includes mostly critical
68
Even Sabatier (2007) admits that while the conceptualization of resources is relatively easy, its operationalization “has proven extraordinarily difficult”. 69
Piper M., ”A five-step program for change“, University Affairs, 6 October 2008.
105
statements on the yearly budgets and the organization of student protests. For the CAUT, the
PSE Act was the key policy lobbying document, with which it approached senior government
officials, politicians and other post-secondary education associations or organizations. Its goal
was to get the federal funding role renewed by “capturing the imagination of the public”. It
did capture the attention of New Democratic Party, but neither the sponsoring Member of
Parliament, Denise Savoie, nor the CAUT expected the bill to pass in parliament. Rather, the
PSE Act was a means to receive some media attention and to draw the attention of a larger
audience to what they perceive to be the main issues in post-secondary education. Hence, for
the EO Coalition, raising public awareness “is part of effective lobbying”, as the CFS
representative noted.
After all, however, it is the PR Coalition which is by far the most resourceful advocacy
coalition, not least because of its constitutional powers. The largest and richest provinces, in
particular Quebec and Alberta, have mobilized and invested considerable resources in leading
the coalition opposing further federal intrusions, for example through the creation of the
Council of the Federation. In addition, Quebec constitutes a united front, having the students
and most universities behind them, which indirectly weakens the other two advocacy
coalitions. A perhaps unconventional, but nevertheless pertinent resource is the latent
separatist sentiment, which can be mobilized to oppose federal programs. In contrast, smaller
have-not provinces such as Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Manitoba have much less
influence in interprovincial deliberations. Hence, they rely more on the federal support given
their limited fiscal and policy capacities, and thus are more cooperative.
In conclusion, all three advocacy coalitions have adopted different strategies, depending on
their resources and their constituencies. Major universities, with the help of the AUCC, have
106
established direct links with the highest government levels, presenting themselves as key
partners to solve Canada‟s educational challenges. On the other hand, the EO coalition
followed mostly a confrontational approach that aimed at raising awareness and public
support. Finally, under the leadership of the most resource-rich provinces - whether in oil or
separatists -the PR Coalition has further institutionalized their common front against the
federal government.
6. DISCUSSION
Our research question aims at deepening our understanding as to why, to date, there is no pan-
Canadian or national post-secondary education strategy in Canada. In this chapter, we will
first discuss the results of the analysis on the basis of the preceding chapters and provide a
response to the main research question. Second, Fisher et al.‟s (2006) assertion that Canada is
heading towards a national post-secondary education strategy will be reviewed. Finally, we
will consider the policy implications and will propose a possible research agenda.
6.1. Why is there no pan-Canadian post-secondary education strategy?
There are three key elements in the ACF model explaining policy stability. They are: 1) the
advocacy coalitions‟ beliefs; 2) their degree of coordination and resources, and 3) the
relatively stable parameters which structure the interaction within the policy subsystem. With
respect to the first aspect, policy stability is explained by the fact that there have been no
major changes in the actors‟ beliefs. Both the PSE Act and PSE Strategy advocacy coalitions
support a more coordinated approach to post-secondary education, but there are significant
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differences in their fundamental convictions, i.e. which values should have ultimate priority,
and what form and direction a comprehensive pan-Canadian policy should take. Their
divergent belief systems can be interpreted as a result of the developments and shifts that have
been taking place in Canada‟s post-secondary education sector as a consequence of meta-
forces such as globalization, neo-liberal ideology and the knowledge economy paradigm. The
EO coalition is critical towards many of these trends and advocates largely a return to the
public managerial model. Its criticism is based on a negative perception of the altered role of
the state in higher education, as we discussed at the outset. There is a sense that Canada‟s
post-secondary education sector should continue to build on the same principles upon which it
has expanded with much success in the last fifty years. This view is connected to a larger
world view that stresses equal opportunities as the ultimate goal of education policy, even
more so in times when higher education is understood as a social right. Hence, this advocacy
coalition is closely associated with the labour union and social-democratic movements. In
contrast, the EE coalition will always support the EO coalition in advocating for more public
funding, but it has, to a large extent, embraced the changes and new challenges, albeit
sometimes reluctantly. Major research universities see themselves competing on a global
level, so do smaller- and mid-sized universities, though to a lesser degree. For all universities,
competition for students, researchers and new sponsors has become the new modus vivendi.
The G5 proposal can be taken as an indicator that the efficiency – equal opportunity
dichotomy has widened, not least by the government‟s push to commercialize research. While
this development has created tensions even within the EE Coalition, it has had little effect on
the PR Coalition‟s largely shared belief opposing further federal government intrusion. From
the late 1990s until the mid-2000s, post-secondary education was one of the major battle
108
fields on which federal-provincial disagreements were played out. The PR Coalition ‟s fierce
opposition to federal-provincial collaboration in post-secondary education can be attributed to
what the ACF refers to as a devil shift (see Sabatier, 2007): advocacy coalitions‟ experiences
of losses lasts longer and is felt more strongly than victories. The drastic cuts of the federal
transfer payments in 1994 and the subsequent creation of „boutique‟ programs have caused
such a devil shift and, to this day, is still very present in the discourse of the PR Coalition.
Despite the more conciliatory „Open Federalism‟ approach by Prime Minister Harper, there is
an underlying feeling of mistrust about the federal government‟s initiatives, not least because
they are often launched unilaterally.
Second, the fact that no major policy change has occurred can be explained in terms of the
degree of coordination in the advocacy coalitions as well their resources and strategies. The
EO coalition has demonstrated a relatively high degree of interdependency and shared values,
which has contributed to a minor policy change of having earmarked the share for post-
secondary education within the CST. At the same time, it is understood that a PSE Act
including conditionality is unlikely to be adopted. Therefore, the PSE Act‟s proposal is also a
public relations tool seeking to foster a sense of shared identity tying in with what is
considered a key event in the history of social rights similar to the universal access to health
care through the Canada Health Act. In contrast, the EE coalition rejects such an approach,
based largely on a different belief system, but also on a strategy that wants to be more
pragmatic and incremental. However, the relations among its membership are much less
coordinated and interdependent. In fact, in some circumstances the relationship is even
competitive. Thus, although the CCL proposal for a national data strategy and a pan-Canadian
post-secondary education strategy has largely been endorsed, no organization appears to have
109
invested many resources to promote it. Finally, the PR Coalition‟s success in opposing any
sort of collaborative mechanisms with the federal government resides, of course, foremost in
its constitutional powers. But it has historically also been quite effective in defending its
rights by institutionalizing its collaboration. Having not only the Quebec government on
board, but also Quebec‟s universities and students, has certainly contributed to weakening the
other two advocacy coalitions.
Ultimately, the relatively stable parameters, which structure the interaction between the actors
in the policy subsystem, provide a third element in explaining policy stability. One important
aspect in this respect is the nature of the policy good itself. A comparison with health care is
pertinent, as it is also a provincial responsibility, but regulated through the Canada Health
Act. Many interview participants have pointed to the inverse correlation between health care
and higher education spending, noting that the former would always win over the latter. This
is explained by the fact that education expenditures are long-term investments, whereas
spending on health care has fast and tangible results, which is more attractive to politicians.
More importantly, in the health care sector, there is a constant sense of urgency. News about
people dying because of insufficient access to proper health care makes headlines and further
creates public pressure on politicians. As everybody is concerned about one‟s health, the
constituency for politicians is also much larger than in post-secondary education. Although
advocacy groups, especially students groups, try to create a sense of urgency, it is, as one
respondent admitted, a very difficult undertaking. Not only are potential students who cannot
access post-secondary education not as visible as people in need of health care, there is also
110
no complete and undisputed data, which would favour policy change (Sabatier and Weible,
2007).70
A second important parameter in our study is obviously the basic constitutional structure,
which is at the core of the issue. As discussed, there is an inherent tension between the
responsibilities attributed to the provinces by the British North American Act of 1967, and the
spending power of the federal government which is also based, albeit not explicitly, on the
same founding document. This tension has been exacerbated by the fact that the provinces are
in charge of delivering services in increasingly costly policy areas such as health care and
post-secondary education, but do not have the fiscal power to cover the expenses on their
own. Canada‟s constitutional structure features another central characteristic, which is its
relation with the province of Quebec. One francophone interviewee noted that, for Quebec in
particular, education is closely linked to language. Thus, Quebec‟s post-secondary education
policy, focusing on accessibility and inclusiveness, must also be seen in the light of its „battle‟
to protect the francophone culture in North America. This particularity is mirrored in the
belief systems of Quebec associations, which largely support the defensive position of their
government.71
The Quebec split is also replicated within national associations, such as the
AUCC, when it comes to the role of the federal government, and influences the policy
proposal of the CAUT whose PSE Act offers Quebec the possibility to opt out of the
arrangement. As many interview participants pointed out, following the constitutional battles
under Pierre Trudeau and Brian Mulroney, and the near-separation of la belle province in
1995, no political party wishes to reopen the constitution over post-secondary education.
70
For example, note that OECD’s Pisa studies, which have gathered comprehensive data on the learning performance of children in K-12 education and which were widely published, have triggered education reforms in numerous countries. 71
One exception is the FQPPU, which has endorsed the CAUT’s Post-Secondary Education Act.
111
6.2. Is policy change ahead?
When the Conservative government of Stephen Harper came into power and presented its
second budget in 2007, it made the clarification of roles and responsibilities between the
federal and provincial governments a priority. In subsequent years, changes were made to
post-secondary education programs and transfers in an attempt to ease the previously tense
relationship. Are the minor policy changes an indicator of a more comprehensive policy
change in the near future?
According to the ACF, there are two paths towards policy change: policy oriented learning
and external perturbations. The former occurs when there are “alternations of thought or
behavioural intentions that result from experience and/or new information and that are
concerned with the attainment or revision of policy objectives” (Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith,
1999: p. 123). Policy oriented learning is particularly conducive under conditions in which
there are accepted quantitative data and a forum prestigious enough to force professionals
from different coalitions to participate. Our research has demonstrated that many experts as
well policy makers and stakeholders agree that there is a lack of comparable and appropriate
data on Canada‟s post-secondary education system. Various initiatives that have been
launched to improve this situation have either been curtailed or not produced sufficient data.
Moreover, almost all interview participants have deplored the absence of a pan-Canadian or
national forum on post-secondary education. Again, there have been attempts to create such a
112
national focal point, but they have not developed into any sustained format72
. The most
durable interprovincial institution, CMEC, has also been regarded by some as a possible
platform (Allison, 2006; CMEC 2002). To this day, however, provincial governments have
refused to give the federal government a permanent seat and to transform CMEC into an
institution of intergovernmental cooperation. Therefore, the absence of an informed and
continued dialogue on Canada‟s post-secondary education sector makes it very difficult to
change current perceptions, practices and policies.
As far as external perturbations are concerned, the ACF proposes three possible events that
may cause rapid policy change, i.e. alterations in socio-economic conditions as well as in
systemic governing conditions and policy decisions from other subsystems. Regarding the
first external factor, many participants have argued that provinces will be more open to
substantial intergovernmental cooperation only when forced by budgetary constraints. This
has happened already with the smaller have-not provinces which have indeed been more
cooperative with agencies such as the CCL. However, the latest economic and financial crisis
in 2008, which turned even a large jurisdiction such as Ontario into a have-not province, has
not provoked any substantial discussions over new federal-provincial arrangements in post-
secondary education. On the contrary, in an economy in which knowledge is understood as
the only resource that guarantees sustainable economic growth and social prosperity, higher
education policy has become increasingly important for Quebec in defending its particular
status (Courchene, 2004). With regards to a change in governing coalitions, the perception
prevails that the establishment of a pan-Canadian or national strategy is currently not a
72
For example, the CCL is perceived by many as having lost its credibility given the issue over its federally-dominated governance structure; the national conferences in 2005 and 2006 have not seen any long-term follow-up.
113
question of who is in power. As discussed, the current Conservative leadership‟s approach to
„clarifying roles and responsibilities‟ has demonstrated little appetite for consultation and
deliberation, even within a larger framework focusing, for example, on a comprehensive
innovation policy. Under a Liberal government, few see the possibility of a major policy
change. Indeed, even though the Liberal platform for the 2011 elections featured a Canadian
Learning Strategy, including a Canadian Learning Passport offering funding for students
through the Registered Education Savings Plan (RESP), there is no indication that a more
comprehensive approach to post-secondary education is on the Liberal agenda. This is not
surprising given that the last major education initiative in 1998 caused a long lasting
intergovernmental brawl. Even under an NDP led government - no longer deemed as an
unrealistic scenario - the establishment of the PSE Act with its current design including
conditionality is questionable. According to an NDP representative, the goal of Bill C-398
was primarily to get the issue talked about. However, he was uncertain as to whether the
current NDP leadership would support an Act that includes possible sanctions against non-
complying provinces. Finally, with respect to impacts from other subsystems, one possible
„window of opportunity‟ suggested by several respondents is the up-coming negotiations for
equalization payments in 2014, which impacts the Canada Social Transfer. However, others
have again argued that the current Conservative government is eager to avoid entering into
any discussions that could potentially touch upon constitutional questions.
In concluding, our analysis suggests that the probability for major policy change towards a
more comprehensive and coordinated approach to Canadian post-secondary education is low.
Even though Prime Minister Harper‟s approach has eased the main tensions with the
provinces by dealing on a one-on-one basis with each Premier, there is an underlying, yet
114
significant element of mistrust. Therefore, any policy proposal that seeks to address the
perceived lack of coordination would have to consider this current characteristic of federal-
provincial relations. Therefore, what policy implications can we draw from our analysis and
what does it mean in terms of shaping a future research agenda?
6.3. Policy implications and research agenda: Towards an Innovation platform
At the beginning of this paper we have stressed that the purpose of this research was not to
demonstrate the necessity of a post-secondary education strategy, but to understand the
reasons why there is none. There are, nevertheless, policy implications. At latest since
Kingdon (2003), we know that in public policy, problems do not necessarily precede
solutions; instead, advocacy groups may „create‟ problems to advance their own interests and
leverage their influence by suggesting their solutions. Alas, from a public policy sciences
perspective, it first needs to be determined what can be improved. Critics of national higher
education proposals are not entirely wrong suggesting that the respective advocacy groups
have not been fully convincing in establishing the rational for more collaboration. The current
rational of national strategy proponents consists of saying that, yes, Canada‟s post-secondary
education sector is performing well; but it will not be able to face the new challenges in the
future if change does not happen now. As illustrated, national strategies have been suggested
since the 1960s as various solutions to resolve the particular crisis situation of its time, or to
avoid an impending one. Half a century later, Canada possesses undoubtedly a strong
university system, despite all these crises. That said, neither the advocates of a
“provincialized” higher education landscape have been able to demonstrate the merits of the
115
status quo, or of an even more decentralised system. Thus, from a policy sciences
perspectives, a first step would consist of bringing provincial and federal governments as well
as all relevant stakeholders together to produce and share the necessary data. As we know,
data collection and the establishment of indicators is in itself not a neutral process. This is
why all participating parties would have to negotiate and agree on a set of principles defining
what should be measured. In short, what it is needed is data and a forum. Obviously, this is
not a new proposal and many policy makers have advocated for it. In fact, the CCL was
created for this very purpose and has produced much valuable research on Canada‟s post-
secondary education system, providing a long needed country-wide perspective. At the same
time, the way by which the CCL was established illustrates the very reason, why
intergovernmental cooperation has - so far - largely been unsuccessful, that is, the lack of
mutual trust. The best policies fail if there is mistrust among the main partners. Although we
believe that the CCL has made important contributions to the understanding of the Canadian
post-secondary education sector, it has failed in bringing the major provinces to the table and
build trust ties. How can trust be built up? Of course, this question goes beyond the scope of
our quest for policy implications and, in fact, has been occupying politicians and scholars of
Canadian federalism since almost the very beginning of Canadian Confederation.
That said, we believe that building trust implies working in partnership and collaboratively,
and not simply devolving responsibilities to the provinces, as the current government‟s hands-
off approach suggests. Partnerships typically work best when they gather parties around a
topic, which addresses the interests and needs of all participants. The concept of innovation
has been driving policymaking in recent years and could well provide a focal point for
116
federal-provincial collaboration. According to the OECD73
, innovation must be understood in
a comprehensive and holistic way. It not only refers to new or significantly improved products
and processes, but includes also organizational innovation. Hence, as sort of a meta-concept,
an Innovation platform could constitute a forum bringing together policymakers from all
levels of government and stakeholders to develop policy aiming at promoting not only
economic and social innovation, but also new ways for policy- and decision-making
processes. For example, one could be inspired by Janice Stein‟s (2006) proposal of a
networked federalism. In a nutshell: Networked federalism aims to enhance informal political
and social relationships among public officials, policymakers and stakeholders from all levels
of government in a non-hierarchical setting with common goals to solve policy problems.
Noting that the confidence among Canadian public officials has been low since the mid-
1990s, Stein argues that networked federalism can start incrementally rebuilding „trust ties‟,
which would not need any constitutional amendments.74
Without going further into detail, we
invite readers to read Stein‟s (2006) proposal and ask: Wouldn‟t post-secondary education
present the ideal policy field to make a first step towards an innovation platform based on an
innovative networked federalism concept aimed at building trust?
On the basis of the preceding chapters, two paths for further research are suggested. First, the
literature review has illustrated that Canadian higher education research has long focused on
individual jurisdictions. Only recently, a stronger national approach has been adopted
highlighting the common rather than diverging elements. Nonetheless, further research is
73
See http://www.oecd.org/document/10/0,3746,en_2649_33723_40898954_1_1_1_1,00.html (accessed on 2 July 2011) . 74
In this respect, is it interesting to point to the case of Switzerland. According to the recent study of Fisher et al. (2010), strong trust ties among the major stakeholders and government levels have been instrumental in finding consensus on the constitutional amendments of 2006, which have established new intergovernmental mechanisms to enhance intergovernmental coordination in the field of higher education.
117
necessary to complete the picture. In particular, there is no or little research done on the
ecosystem of national post-secondary education associations and lobby groups, which may
exercise considerable influence on the federal policy processes related to universities.75
Even
more so important is to understand their interaction with their provincial members or
counterparts in order to appreciate what factors are driving their advocacy priorities. Are, in
fact, national post-secondary education strategies just a means to further their own interests?
How do they coordinate and consult with their provincial members? Therefore, this research
agenda would seek to develop a better understanding of how policy agendas in higher
education and research are shaped on both levels of governments, and how they depend on
each other.
The second possible research topic is linked to our discussion and proposal for an innovation
platform based on the concept of networked federalism. An action research on current
intergovernmental coordination „policy spaces‟ in education and research, as well as in other
Canadian policy fields, could determine what ingredients have made collaborative working
relationships between federal and provincial governments successful. The first annual CCL
(2006) report has taken stock of the current coordinative mechanisms in place. However, a
future research agenda would have to go beyond the institutional aspects and – in the sense of
Sabatier and Jenkins-Smith‟s approach - take into account cognitive factors as well as the
personal social interactions and perceptions of policymakers.
75
One exception of Morgan (2009), which provides an interesting insight into AUCC’s lobbying efforts with the federal government.
118
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Two observations were made at the beginning of this research project. First, in the Western
world, the growing importance of universities for wealth creation and social prosperity has
resulted in many higher education reforms. In federalist states, this has also meant the
redefinition of roles and responsibilities of local and national governments by launching
common strategies or creating collaborative institutions. Second, Canada has been an
exception in this respect insofar as there are no mechanisms to coordinate federal and
provincial higher education policies. This phenomenon has generally been explained in terms
of Canada‟s federalist system and its related issues. The purpose of this research was to go
beyond that and develop a more in-depth understanding of why this is, by looking at the
beliefs and perceptions of the advocacy coalitions, and focusing on the policy subsystem,
rather than the broad political environment. We have found that the discussion on a national
post-secondary education strategy reflects a larger debate over the fundamental values that
should guide the sector in the future. Inclusiveness has long been the cornerstone of Canada‟s
university sector, which should also be seen in light of Canada‟s need to distinguish itself
from its southern neighbour. The strong belief in the value of accessibility has been an
important driver in the expansion of the higher education sector, which, in itself, is seen as a
success. However, as Sörlin (2007) notes, the trends towards more competition - producing
winners and losers – creates tensions especially in higher education systems with an
egalitarian culture. This antagonism also largely determines the sort of pan-Canadian or
national approach to post-secondary education that is advocated. Hence, the two belief
systems of the EO and EE Coalition must be seen against the background of the gradual shift
from an exclusively public managerial, idealist regime to a functionalist, academic capitalist
119
regime. What we have named the EO Coalition believes that akin to the Canada Health Act,
the Canadian government has the responsibility to ensure that access to post-secondary
education, as it was understood before the mid-1990s, remains the core principle. This
includes a state which ensures equal opportunities throughout the country, but entirely
respects the independence of the academic enterprise. Going into the future, therefore, means
to build upon past strengths. This view is mirrored in the policy core beliefs. The proposed
Canada Post-Secondary Act, which stresses values such as public administration and collegial
governance, reflects the willingness to return to the public managerial regime. In contrary to
the New Public Management (NPM) approach, these higher education regimes stress values
such as democracy and legitimacy, instead of efficiency and value for money (see Ferlie et al.,
2008). This also explains the criticism of the federal programs and budget allocations that
have increasingly supported commercialisation and accelerated the shift towards an academic
capitalism system. The EE Coalition, in contrast, does not reject traditional values in
themselves admitting that the system works well. It is argued, however, that universities no
longer operate only in a national, but increasingly also in a global context. This means
mounting competition among national economies as well as among universities. Thus, for
sustainable economic growth and social prosperity, a system that works well is not good
enough, and competition in search for excellence and efficiency becomes the driving force.
This translates into policy core beliefs that stress the need for better federal-provincial
collaboration and to produce comprehensive data in order to design more effective policies.
Hence, the EE Coalition favours policy instruments relating to the New Governance
approach, such as benchmarking and exchange of best practices, which are seen as more
flexible than legislative measures. With respect to the PR Coalition, although provinces may
120
stand differently on the excellence versus equal opportunity spectrum, they do agree on the
general principles of Canada‟s post-secondary education sector (see CMEC, 1999). There is
nonetheless a dividing line between richer and less well-off provinces, in particular with
respect to their positions on the role of the federal government in this area. For instance, the
Atlantic provinces are much more open to intergovernmental collaboration than, say, Ontario.
Quebec and Alberta have led the advocacy coalition by establishing interprovincial
coordination structures, such as CMEC and the Council of the Federation. Besides the
obvious legal resources, they also benefit from sensitive Quebec-Canada relations. In
comparison, there is no coordination between the two other advocacy coalitions. As well, the
EO coalition coordinates relatively closely, but has little resources. The EE coalition is
marked by a relatively low degree of coordination and its most important representative, the
AUCC, has largely abstained from the discussions about intergovernmental coordinative
mechanisms.
Of course, the transformation from an exclusively public managerial, idealist regime to a
functionalist, academic capitalist regime has also caused tensions in other countries. Canada,
however, is perhaps distinct in that its universities have faced the transformation from an elite
to a mass system earlier than many other countries. Accessibility and inclusiveness have thus
not only had a longer tradition, but are also seen as having contributed to this success. On the
other hand, because of the weak R&D investments by the business sector, policy makers
consider universities as key institutions in promoting innovation, perhaps more so than in
many other countries. Among the G7 states, Canada‟s higher education sector ranks first in
terms of R&D expenditures as a percentage of the GDP. This is mainly due to the federal
government‟s R&D investments since 1997-1998. For this reason, the polarization might be
121
stronger in Canada than elsewhere, which makes coordinated action between the PSE Act and
the EE Coalitions in favour of a national or pan-Canadian approach to post-secondary
education even more difficult. We have furthermore argued that a major policy change in this
respect is not likely. The specificities of „education‟ as a policy field and the absence of a
common forum as well as the general underlying mistrust between the two levels of
government will continue to make talking to each other, let alone acting together, very
difficult.
Hence, does our research reinforce the view of the Canadian exceptionalism? Maybe. But we
believe that in the past, this perspective has favoured a general attitude that accepts the status
quo as a given and tends to avoid any meaningful and sustained dialogue about how to
improve the governance structures in the higher education sector. Ironically, the distinct
decentralized nature of the system would make innovative mechanisms for coordination and
collaboration even more important. In this sense, we shall conclude by finishing the
introductory quote by Governor General David Johnston:
…
“When we set our sights together,
we can do better and inspire each other
to achieve great things.”
Governor General David Johnston
Installation Speech, Parliament of Canada
1 October 2010
122
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